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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Female Gamester, by Gorges Edmond Howard
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Female Gamester
+
+Author: Gorges Edmond Howard
+
+Release Date: April, 2005 [EBook #7840]
+Posting Date: July 28, 2009
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE FEMALE GAMESTER ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Oliver Walden
+
+
+
+
+
+THE FEMALE GAMESTER
+
+A TRAGEDY
+
+
+By Gorges Edmond Howard
+
+
+ Et quando uberior vitiorum copia? quando
+ Major avaritiae patuit sinus? alea quando
+ Hos animos? neq; enim loculis comitantibus itur,
+ Ad casum tabulae, posita sed luditur arca.
+ Juv. Sat. I.
+
+ Sure none in crimes could erst beyond us go!
+ None such a lust for sordid avarice show!
+ Was e'er the Die so worn in ages past?
+ Purses, nay Chests, are now stak'd on a cast.
+
+
+
+ To the
+ Countess of Charlemont,
+ the Lady Viscountess Southwell,
+ and Lady Lifford.
+
+
+As the example of Persons of rank and quality, must ever have
+a powerful influence upon all others in society, and as I know
+none among the many eminently virtuous characters of your sex,
+(for which this kingdom is above all others distinguished) with
+whom I have the honour of being acquainted, more conspicuous
+than your Ladyships, for excellence of conduct in every female
+department in life, I, therefore, thus presume in taking the
+liberty of presenting the following DRAMATIC ESSAY to your
+patronage, and am, with the highest respect,
+
+ Your Ladyships'
+
+ Most obedient servant, &c.
+ The Author.
+
+
+
+
+To the Reader.
+
+
+I have always been of the same opinion with the Author of
+the Preface to the translation of Brumoy's Greek Theatre;
+in which, speaking of Tragedy, he hath expressed himself
+in the following lines: "In England, the subject is frequently
+too much exalted, and the Scenes are too often laid too high.
+We deal almost solely in the fate of Kings and Princes, as if
+misfortunes were chiefly peculiar to the great. But our Poets
+might consider, that we feel not so intensely the sorrows of
+higher powers, as we feel the miseries of those who are nearer
+upon a level with ourselves. The revolution and fall of empires
+affect us less, than the distresses of a private family. Homer
+himself had wandered like Ulysses, and although by the force
+of imagination he so nobly described the din of battle, and
+the echoing contests of fiery princes, yet his heart still
+sensibly felt the indigence of the wandering Ithacan, and
+the contemptuous treatment shewn to the beggar, whose soul
+and genius deserved a better fate."
+
+This having confirmed me in my opinion, I set about the following
+dramatic attempt upon that horrid vice of Gaming, of all others
+the most pernicious to society, and growing every day more and
+more predominant amongst all ranks of people, so that even the
+examples of a Prince, and Princess, pious, virtuous, and every way
+excellent, as ever a people were blessed with, contrary to the
+well-known axiom,
+
+ Regis ad exemplum totus componitur orbis,
+ have had but small effect.
+
+
+I finished it, part in prose, and part in blank verse, in about six
+weeks, and having shewn it to several of my literary acquaintance,
+the far greater part were of opinion, that it should be entirely
+one, or the other; but, as the scene was laid in private life, and
+chiefly among those of middling rank, it ought to be entirely prose;
+and that, not much exalted; and accordingly, with no small labour,
+I turned it all into prose. But in some short time after, having
+communicated this to Dr. Samuel Johnson, his words (as well as I
+remember) were, "That he could hardly consider a prose Tragedy as
+dramatic; that it was difficult for the Performers to speak it;
+that let it be either in the middling or in low life, it may,
+though in metre and spirited, be properly familiar and colloquial;
+that, many in the middling rank are not without erudition;
+that they have the feelings and sensations of nature, and every
+emotion in consequence thereof, as well as the great, and that
+even the lowest, when impassioned, raise their language; that
+the writing of prose is generally the plea and excuse of poverty
+of Genius." And some others being of the same opinion, I have
+now chang'd it all into metre.
+
+
+ Fired is the Muse! and let the Muse be fired.
+ Who's not inflam'd, when what he speaks he feels?
+ Young.
+
+
+The introduction by the moderns of confidents, those friends
+in Tragedy, to whom the chief personages discover their secrets
+and situation, has been also objected to by critics. The discovery
+is indeed purposely made to the audience, and supplies the want of
+a chorus. But to speak in Monsieur Brumos's own stile: "If Homer,
+in his Epic poem, found a Patroclus necessary to his Achilles, and
+Virgil an Achates to Aeneas, such examples may well justify the
+Dramatic Poets in calling in the assistance of associates, who
+generally appear of more use than ornament to the piece." Besides,
+were it not for them, long and disgusting soliloquies must be
+innumerable, especially if there be any plot in the piece of
+either love, ambition, or conspiracy. In short, as he again says,
+"they are the mortar which forms the proper cement to fix the
+corner stones of the building."
+
+But I declare, that the avoiding on the one hand, a style too high,
+as on the other, too mean and vulgar for the subject, or the persons
+concerned therein, has been a talk far more difficult to me than
+any of the best formed lines in either of my other Tragedies,
+so that I tremble at the thought of the reception this may meet with;
+and had it not been on account of the moral it inculcates, and the
+solicitation of some of my friends, I never should have published it.
+
+
+
+
+PROLOGUE,
+
+By Mr. R. Lewis,
+
+Author of the Candid Philosopher, &c. &c.
+
+
+ The Muse prolific of a Vet'ran Bard
+ Again brings forth;--but yet with labour hard.
+ Nor is it strange, that such a Muse feels pain,
+ When her child starts, like Pallas, from the brain,
+ Arm'd at all points; when bold, she dares engage,
+ With Truth's bright arms, the monsters of the age;
+ When with just aim she points keen Satire's dart,
+ And stabs the foul fiend GAMING to the heart.
+
+ Yet has our Bard, to simple Nature true,
+ Not brought up scenes of grandeur to your view;
+ Not sought by magic arts to strike your eyes,
+ Nor made the gods descend, or fiends arise:
+ His plan is humble, and his fable plain,
+ The town his scene, and artless is his strain:
+ Yet in that strain some lambent sparks still glow
+ Of that bright flame which shew'd Almeyda's woe,
+ Which far-fam'd Tamor's Siege so well display'd,
+ To fire each hero, and to charm each maid.
+
+ Attend, ye Fair and Brave!--Our daring Bard
+ Hopes in your smiles to meet his best reward.
+ And you, ye Critics! if to censure bent,
+ Think on this fact, and scorn the harsh intent;
+ Our Bard would fain discordant things unite,
+ As hard to reconcile as day and night:
+ He strives within chaste Hymen's bands to draw
+ The tuneful maids and sages of the law;
+ Or, what's alike--nor think he means a joke--
+ Melpomene to wed with old judge Coke.
+ Yet still, if you'll not let his faults pass free,
+ The Grecian rev'rence pay to sixty-three.
+
+
+
+
+PERSONS OF THE DRAMA.
+
+
+Men.
+
+ ANDREWS, merchant and banker.
+ WILSON,
+ GOODWIN, merchants, his neighbours.
+ Lord BELMOUR, an English peer.
+ Lord WESTON, nephew to lord BELMOUR.
+ JEFFERSON, first clerk and cashier to Mr. ANDREWS.
+ THOMAS, steward to Mr. ANDREWS.
+
+
+Women.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS.
+ Lady BELMOUR.
+ CONSTANTIA, daughter to Mr. ANDREWS, by a former wife.
+ LUCIA, her kinswoman.
+ MARIA, waiting-woman to Mrs. ANDREWS, and wife to THOMAS.
+
+
+Attendants and other servants, bailiffs, &c.
+
+
+Scene, London.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE FEMALE GAMSTER.
+
+
+
+
+ACT I.
+
+
+
+ SCENE I.
+
+ Mr. ANDREWS's house.
+
+ Enter MARIA and THOMAS.
+
+ MARIA. But why these moping, melancholy looks?
+ Each eye observes and marks them now unseemly,
+ Whilst every countenance but your's speaks joy,
+ At the near wedding of our master's daughter.
+ Sure none so well deserv'd this noble prize:
+ And young lord Weston will be bless'd indeed.
+
+ THOMAS. It has been countermanded.
+
+ MARIA. What again?
+ This is the second time. What can this mean?
+ Then, his unusual absence, now a month,
+ Nor any cause assign'd.
+
+ THOMAS. Some accident.
+ I know a truer flame was ne'er profess'd:
+ A fondness which commenced in his apprenticeship,
+ Here in this house, then but the late lord's nephew,
+ Nor next in heirship to estate or title.
+
+ MARIA. And sure all must approve his well-judg'd choice!
+ In charms and virtues there are none surpass her.
+
+ THOMAS. Heav'n grant my fears are groundless! but, Maria,
+ To think on what of late I daily see,
+ Afflicts my soul.
+
+ MARIA. What is't your fears suggest?
+
+ THOMAS. A wasted fortune and a sinking credit,
+ With the near ruin of this worthy family;
+ The thought materially concerns us both.
+
+ MARIA. But, why again, should we distress ourselves
+ For that we cannot help?
+
+ THOMAS. Ungenerous thought!
+ Duty and love and gratitude demand it.
+ 'Twas here we met each other; here we wedded,
+ And ever have receiv'd the kindest treatment.
+ But what disturbs me most--I have been privy
+ To matters which I should not have conceal'd
+ From our good friend her father.
+
+ MARIA. Think not of it.
+ It is not possible to save them now.
+
+ THOMAS. Would in his second marriage he had met
+ With one more suited to his years and rank!
+
+ MARIA. But are not all things for the better alter'd?
+ Our house fill'd often with the best of company?
+
+ THOMAS. The best saidst thou? O! no, the worst of all,
+ A shameless crew of fashionable pillagers;
+ So that this bank house, by their nightly riot,
+ Might rather seem a rake-frequented tavern;
+ And ruin is their sport. Is not each servant
+ A worn-out victim to those midnight revels,
+ Without a sabbath's rest? (For in these times,
+ All sanctity is scoff'd at by the great,
+ And heaven's just wrath defy'd.) An honest master,
+ Scarcely a month beyond his fiftieth year,
+ (Heart-rent with trouble at these sad proceedings,)
+ Wears to the eye a visage of fourscore:
+ Nor to be wondered at.
+
+ MARIA. You dream too much.
+
+ THOMAS. O! it is seen by all. Oft through his groves,
+ With folded arms and downcast looks he saunters,
+ Ev'n 'midst the dank inclemency of night.
+
+ MARIA. You're too severe, too scrupulous; why, man,
+ My mistress is a perfect saint, compar'd
+ With some of those I formerly have serv'd.
+
+ THOMAS. Her conduct has of late been foully censur'd.
+ But I've disclos'd the whole to our kind neighbours
+ Wilson and Goodwin, his most faithful friends--
+
+ MARIA. For which ten thousand blisters scald your tongue! [Aside]
+
+ THOMAS. Who are resolv'd (the task howe'er ungrateful)
+ Quickly to lay his desp'rate state before him.
+
+ MARIA. But pray, why should not we as well as others,
+ Avail ourselves of something, whilst all's going?
+
+ THOMAS. Think'st thou to tempt me by a thought so vile?
+ No; I defy ev'n Envy's cankering tongue
+ To brand me with the name of faithless steward
+ Still steady to my trust, nor love, nor fear,
+ Shall reason from my soul, its inbred honesty.
+ What then would be the transport of the thought,
+ That I, from wreck had sav'd this shatter'd bark,
+ Though poverty and want were my reward!
+
+ MARIA. I see you are as obstinate as usual,
+ And still persist in your old-fashion'd ravings.
+ Does not experience daily prove that wealth
+ Alone gives honour; poverty disgrace?
+
+ THOMAS. All this concerns this transient world alone;
+ Nor is it worth a single moment's thought.
+ A slender pittance, earn'd by honest industry,
+ Surpasses mines of wealth acquir'd by fraud.
+
+ MARIA. It cannot sure be wrong to make reprisals!
+ Hath she not got in loan from us our earnings
+ From time to time, nor heeds our pressing calls?
+
+ THOMAS. Ay, as she wastes the honest tradesman's dues,
+ Which from her husband she receives to pay.
+ But would her crime be an excuse for ours?
+ Were that the rule, 'twould be a desp'rate world.
+
+ MARIA. 'Tis not a wonder he should be distress'd.
+ Six months are scarcely past since one cashier,
+ In whom you know he plac'd the highest confidence,
+ Absconded with some thousands.
+
+ THOMAS. So 'tis said, [Bell rings]
+ But time will quickly shew the truth of all.
+
+ MARIA. Heard you the bell? 'tis he, just come to town.
+
+ THOMAS. And well he came so late, or he had met
+ On their retreat, that group of restless rioters,
+ Who day and night pursue this misled woman. [Bell rings again.]
+ It is the bell again. I am resolv'd
+ To speak my fears, receive them as he may.
+
+ MARIA. Prithee, forbear till you revolve it further. [He, goes off]
+ Doubtless she's daily plunging into ruin
+ The poor infatuated man her husband,
+ Whom fondness hath made blind to her misconduct.
+ But I must hear what passes at this meeting;
+ Wherefore, I'll to the closet next the chamber,
+ Where usually they meet for private conference. [She goes off.]
+
+
+
+ SCENE II.
+
+ Another room in Mr. ANDREWS's house.
+
+ Mr. ANDREWS and THOMAS.
+
+ ANDREWS. What strange disorder runs thro' all this house!
+ It seems more like a place of midnight revelling,
+ Than habitation of a sober family,
+ And every servant in it looks a spectre.
+
+ [A servant delivers Mr. ANDREWS a letter, which he reads;
+ servant retires.]
+
+ "This from your late unfortunate cashier, serves
+ to inform you that he never wrong'd you; 'tis true,
+ he was deficient much when he departed, yet, by
+ that Power to whom all thoughts lie open! he knows
+ not how it happened; but, if the present rumours
+ are not false, your greatest foe is nearest to
+ your heart."
+
+ Such secret notices of late are frequent.
+ When was this letter brought?
+
+ THOMAS. 'Twas left last night.
+
+ ANDREWS. Is my wife up?
+
+ THOMAS. She's not long gone to rest.
+
+ ANDREWS. Too much her practised course. Unthinking woman!
+ Thus she precipitates our common ruin. [Aside.]
+ Did not you tell me that my neighbour Wilson
+ Had been enquiring for me here to-day?
+
+ THOMAS. He was three times, and now I hear his voice.
+
+ ANDREWS. 'Tis opportune; return when he departs. [THOMAS goes off]
+
+ Enter WILSON.
+
+ Welcome! thrice welcome! truest, best of friends.
+
+ WILSON. I hope 'twill speedily be in my power,
+ As 'tis my wish sincere, to give you joy
+ On the most happy marriage of your daughter.
+
+ Andrew. A thousand thanks! 'twas to have been to morrow,
+ But is postponed a while.
+
+ WILSON. There is no prize,
+ Wealthy, or noble, which she doth not merit.
+
+ ANDREWS. Again I thank my friend; but tell me wherefore,
+ We meet not now as we were wont? time was
+ When scarce a single day knew us asunder;
+ Of late we're so for weeks.
+
+ WILSON. Where lies the blame?
+ You then were us'd to join your happy friends,
+ In all their harmony and mirthful innocence;
+ But you and yours have quite estrang'd yourselves,
+ Scorning to mingle in our humble circles.
+
+ ANDREWS. And is this mode of life to us peculiar?
+ The tide of fashion, in these days of riot,
+ Sweeps all before it that its torrent meets.
+
+ WILSON. To our eternal shame!--All sense is fled,
+ And ev'ry social pleasure with their virtues.
+ Nor boast we more that wholesome plain economy
+ Which made our ancestors so justly fam'd
+ For honestly, and every gen'rous deed;
+ But in its stead a splendid, wasteful vanity
+ (Regardless of the toiler's hard-earn'd claims,)
+ Pervades each rank, and all distinction levels:
+ Too sure fore-runners of the loss of freedom.
+
+ ANDREWS. Your picture is as just as it is gloomy.
+ But you can firmly stem th' infection's tide,
+ And 'scape the censure we so justly merit.
+ Yet you'd not blame your friend, if you knew all. [He walks to
+ and fro.]
+
+ WILSON. I cannot longer justify myself,
+ To be a mute spectator of such ruin,
+ As hourly threatens this respected family. [Aside.]
+ To flatter, or conceal would ill become
+ That friendship you have said you so esteem.
+ My heart is open then, and can't acquit you.
+ You've lost that fortitude you once possess'd.
+
+ ANDREWS. O Wilson! I confess your charge is just.
+ The truth is, I'm no longer master here,
+ Nor of my family, nor of myself;
+ And yet you may remember, no man liv'd
+ More happily than I with my first wife.
+
+ WILSON. She had all the virtues that adorn her sex.
+
+ ANDREWS. And was withal of such a gentle nature,
+ That I could ne'er conceive that ev'n in thought,
+ She would impede or contradict my wish.
+
+ WILSON. The loss was great. 'Tis now about ten years?
+
+ ANDREWS. Not more: you also know, that shortly after,
+ (Full short indeed!) I wedded with the present.
+
+ WILSON. Not with the approbation of your friends.
+ Our women even then were greatly alter'd,
+ Their manners as their education different.
+ Their beauties too, are as their hearts deceitful,
+ While art supplies the spoil of their excesses.
+ I'm happy in the thoughts of being single.
+
+ ANDREWS. Condemn not all for some; and prize their worth.
+ By them we are refin'd; by them inspir'd;
+ For them, we ev'ry toil and danger court,
+ That lead to glory and make fame immortal.
+ Trust me, my friend, there's no terrestrial blessing
+ Equals the union of two souls in virtue.
+
+ WILSON. Your wife was then but Young?
+
+ ANDREWS. About sixteen,
+ And I in years superiour to her father.
+ Yet she appear'd of such congenial manners
+ With my first wife, whose intimate she was,
+ It led me to this early second marriage.
+ And ev'n long after, such was her behaviour,
+ That I insensibly forgot my loss;
+ For tho' by birth and family allied,
+ To several of the first in rank and fortune,
+ Yet did not that the least affect her conduct,
+ Which she still suited to our humbler station;
+ A tender parent and a loving wife.
+
+ WILSON. And such might have remain'd, had she not quit
+ The innocent society of those,
+ Who best were suited to her state in life.
+
+ ANDREWS. O! 'tis most true; and I have often thought
+ My happiness too great for long continuance.
+ The toil, fatigue and numerous disappointments,
+ (The sure attendants on a life of business)
+ Were sooth'd and sweeten'd by the fond endearments,
+ With which she met me in the hours of leisure.
+ Oft hath she vow'd, that she despis'd the profit,
+ How great soe'er, that sunder'd us at times.
+ But all the halcyon days I once enjoy'd,
+ Do but conspire to aggravate the misery,
+ Which now quite weighs me down.
+
+ WILSON. Nor is it strange.
+ Your house is grown a nuisance to its neighbours,
+ Where twice in every week, if not more frequent,
+ A motley crowd at midnight hour assembles;
+ Whose ruffian-like attendants in the street,
+ Alarm the peaceful, and disturb their quiet.
+
+ ANDREWS. I know, I feel it all.
+
+ WILSON. Its inside too
+ Is not less riotous; where this same medly
+ Waste the whole night, destroying health and fortune,
+ Of ev'ry social duty quite regardless.
+
+ ANDREWS. They've been unseen by me. My health's weak state
+ Will not admit my sleeping in the city;
+ Whence also, I am often whole days absent;
+ As my neglected finances disclose.
+ Have you at any time beheld these scenes?
+
+ WILSON. Once, on the invitation of your spouse.
+
+ ANDREWS. Relate them, if not irksome.
+
+ WILSON. At your instance.
+ Then, the first object 'midst this wild assembly,
+ (For such the night's proceedings fully prov'd it)
+ That urg'd my wonder, was the heavy purses
+ Which were display'd there, even by the women,
+ Without remorse or shame.
+
+ ANDREWS. Ay, there!--Proceed.
+
+ WILSON. After the night had been near three part wasted,
+ Full half the meeting more like spectres seem'd
+ Than of this world. The clamour then grew great;
+ Whilst ev'ry torturing passion of the foul
+ Glar'd in the ghastly visages of several.
+ Some grinn'd in rage, some tore their hair, whilst others,
+ Upon their knees, with hands and eyes uplifted,
+ In curses dar'd assail all-ruling Providence
+ Under the varied names of Fate and Fortune.
+ Nor is there one in the black list of crimes,
+ Which these infernals seem'd not prompt to perpetrate,
+ Whilst on a cast their trembling fortunes hung.
+
+ ANDREWS. O Wilson! every passion, every power
+ Of the great human soul are by this vice,
+ This fatal vice of all, quite, quite absorb'd,
+ Save those which its fell purposes excite!
+ Oh! that most vile seducer lady Belmour!
+ Wer't not for her, my wife had been a stranger
+ To all those evils; I to all my misery.
+
+ WILSON. But have our sex surrender'd their prerogative?
+ Or have I liv'd to see the world revers'd?
+ You are a man--
+
+ ANDREWS. I know not what I am.
+ Alas! my friend is stranger to these matters!
+ When once a woman deviates from discretion,
+ Setting her heart on every vain pursuit,
+ No husband then rests master of his fate.
+ Fond love no limit knows to its submission,
+ Not more than beauty to its thirst for empire,
+ Whose tears are not less pow'rful than its smiles.
+ Nay, ev'n dislike, 'gainst reason, oft must yield,
+ Whilst the mind's quiet is an object priz'd;
+ So is the sex from its sweet purpose chang'd--
+
+ WILSON. Your state then seems quite hopeless of relief?
+
+ ANDREWS. O! could I wean her from this one sad vice!
+ Wipe out this only speck in her rich volume!
+ Then, all my woes should cease; then, would I write,
+ In truth's fair characters, her matchless worth,
+ Nor blush to boast the fondness of my heart.
+
+ WILSON. Your love admits some doubt.
+
+ ANDREWS. My love of her!-----
+
+ WILSON. Ev'n so.
+ Do you not tamely see her, ev'ry day,
+ Destroying wantonly her precious health?
+ But what is more------I shall proceed too far.
+
+ ANDREWS. Go on, I am prepar'd.
+
+ WILSON. Her reputation--
+
+ ANDREWS. Her reputation!
+
+ WILSON. I have said it,
+
+ ANDREWS. Heav'n!
+
+ WILSON. It has not 'scap'd the busy tongue of censure,
+ Yet let appearances be what they may,
+ I think she's innocent.
+
+ ANDREWS. What, innocent!
+ Against appearances!--impossible.
+ All sense disclaims the thought; these neglected,
+ Neglect of virtue is the sure attendant,
+ And ev'n the firmest may be then seduced;--
+ 'Tis as the noon-day plain.--Who? who's the villain?
+ The murderer of my peace? By heav'n! he dies.
+
+ WILSON. Madness indeed! all may be mere surmise;
+ Wherefore, at present it will be most prudent,
+ To hush the sad ideas of suspicion.
+ A little time must prove its truth, or falsehood;
+ Besides, the person charg'd is of high rank.
+
+ ANDREWS. O! there's no rank can sanctify such outrage.
+ Lord Belmour! say--
+
+ WILSON. Yes--he--or why that name?
+
+ ANDREWS. They nearly are a-kin--and yet of late
+ His visits have been rather more than usual.
+ But have you any proof for this your hint?
+
+ WILSON. It is the current rumour of the neighbourhood,
+ Else I should ne'er have dar'd to wound your ear;
+ But friendship urges the unpleasing task--
+ You tell me, you sleep mostly in the country?
+
+ ANDREWS. What then? he may, ev'n when I sleep in town,
+ Pass nights with her, and all unknown to me.
+
+ WILSON. You puzzle me.
+
+ ANDREWS. 'Tis easily explain'd.
+ For some time past we've slept in separate chambers.
+ For when she had exchang'd her harmless life
+ For the destructive course she now pursues,
+ Her hours became so late and so uncertain,
+ My rest was quite disturb'd.
+
+ WILSON. Unhappy state!
+ Have you discours'd her calmly on these matters?
+ Few of her sex possess superiour talents.
+
+ ANDREWS. Her temper is so chang'd, so sour'd of late,
+
+ Which with her sad misconduct still increases;
+ And she so prides herself on her alliances,
+ And the caresses of her vain associates,
+ That neither I, nor her neglected children,
+ Dare ev'n attempt the least discourse with her.
+ Did you know all, 'twould rend your tender heart. [He pauses
+ a while, then walks about much disturbed.]
+
+ WILSON. He has abundance more to hear of yet;
+ Two bills this very day, went off unpaid,
+ A stroke too fatal, e'er to be recover'd. [Aside.]
+ Affliction is heav'n's trial of our patience,
+ As of its love sure proof; and oft' our benefit.
+
+ ANDREWS. Can you continue friend to such lost fortune?
+
+ WILSON. How it would grieve me could you even doubt it!
+ The surest test of friendship is affliction.
+ 'Tis then, the faithful heart displays itself,
+ Whilst vain professors vanish in the gloom.
+
+ ANDREWS. Tell me--Oh tell me! what would you advise?
+
+ WILSON. Against we meet on the Exchange to-day,
+ I will revolve it well.
+
+ ANDREWS. Reward your goodness heav'n! [WILSON goes off.]
+
+ Re-enter THOMAS.
+
+ Oh what a fatal change in my affairs!
+ Have you observ'd it, Thomas, yet been silent?
+
+ THOMAS. I almost wish I knew not how to answer:
+ But since it is his will I must obey. [Aside.]
+ Dare then your faithful servant speak some truths,
+ With which his heart is full?
+
+ ANDREWS. What prevents you?
+
+ THOMAS. I dare not--yet--[aside] suppose 'twere of a wife,
+ So lov'd, so doted on?--
+
+ ANDREWS. Prithee, proceed.
+
+ THOMAS. Then know, last night, that as I lay awake,
+ And hearing near the compting-house a noise,
+ I rose, and in the dark mov'd softly towards it;
+ When I (unseen by her) beheld her passing
+ Quickly from thence, and in her hands a light,
+ And key, with which she op'd the iron chest.
+
+ ANDREWS. [After some pause] Good heav'n! that she could injure
+ me so deeply------
+ My credit------but I cannot bear to expose her!
+ Means have been us'd to stop all further mischief,
+ On some suspicions of mine own before.
+ So for the present, must appear to doubt it. [Aside.]
+ [To THOMAS] For this, I owe you my most grateful thanks.
+ I've ever found you faithful to my interest;
+ Yet, as your zeal may have alarm'd your fears,
+ Speak not of this, until I weigh it further,
+ Not even to your wife.
+
+ THOMAS. I shall obey. [THOMAS goes off]
+
+ ANDREWS. What an unhappy man!--It is impossible--
+ I ne'er knew one in ev'ry thought more pure
+ Than she was once--and now to be so chang'd--
+ I will not see her more--and yet--O heav'n!--
+ 'Tis demonstration only can convince me.
+
+ Ah! lovely woman, didst thou ne'er design
+ But in thy proper sphere alone to shine,
+ Using with modesty each winning art,
+ To fix, as well as captivate the heart,
+ Love's purest flame might gild the nuptial days,
+ And Hymen's altars then for ever blaze.
+
+
+
+
+ACT II.
+
+
+
+ SCENE I.
+
+ An apartment in Mr. ANDREWS's house.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS and MARIA.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. I'm quite amaz'd at what you have related. [She
+ walks to and fro much agitated.]
+
+ MARIA. I must not now discover, how her husband
+ Receiv'd the tidings of a secret key:
+ She would not rest, until reveng'd of mine. [Aside.]
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Can you now help me? I am much distress'd.
+
+ MARIA. You know I am devoted to your service.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. So I have ever thought.--Heav'n! what a state!
+ Compell'd to sooth ev'n those my soul abhors. [Aside.]
+
+ MARIA. Madam, I'm griev'd to see your spirits sinking.
+ But hear me, and I think I can propose
+ A scheme by which it may be so contriv'd,
+ As to retort this charge on your fair character,
+ Cruel as false, respecting the lord Belmour,
+ On your base neighbour Wilson, the inventer,
+ With honour to yourself.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. What, and he innocent?
+
+ MARIA. Hath he not wrong'd you?------beyond all redress?
+ Labour'd to blast your spotless fame for ever,
+ Whilst you are innocent?
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Yet much to blame. [Aside.]
+
+ MARIA. Wherefore, your honour calls aloud for vengeance.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. True; his harsh, cruel, groundless, information
+ Hath to my poor mind's peace been most injurious.
+
+ MARIA. It is the only means I can devise,
+ At once to wipe away this foul aspersion,
+ And all the other mischiefs that may follow.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. But how, I pray? none bear more fair repute.
+
+ MARIA. Yet vers'd in gallantry.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. So I have heard.
+
+ MARIA. That answers well; suppose then, in a letter,
+ You mention earnestly, his having made
+ Some overtures injurious to your honour,
+ And should he persevere, that you'll disclose
+ This breach of truth and friendship to your husband?
+ Then, let this letter, as it were by chance,
+ Fall in my master's way.--Consider this.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. [Pauses] A most ingenious thought!--but to
+ pursue it--[Pauses again.]
+ Shall I at such dark villainy connive!--
+ Are there no means to 'scape the tongue of calumny,
+ But by imbibing her infectious breath,
+ And blasting innocence with sland'rous falsehood?
+ Chang'd howsoe'er I be, yet my soul shudders
+ Ev'n at the thought of an unjust revenge--
+ I ne'er could reconcile it to myself.
+
+ MARIA. Again I say, your own defence demands it.
+ It is the sole resource you have to save you.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. I am myself the cause of all these miseries. [Aside.]
+ I see great difficulties in this matter.
+
+ MARIA. I, not any--do you but write this letter;
+ The rest be mine--but soft!--my master's voice--
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. What shall I do? I would not meet him now.
+
+ MARIA. You must not, till our purpose is effected.
+ Be not distress'd--I'll urge a fit excuse.
+ So, to your chamber, and prepare the letter,
+ No patience can submit to such indignities. [Goes off.]
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. I dread the very thoughts of this--and yet--
+ To rest beneath so vile an accusation--
+ It cannot--must not be--I should be false,
+ And to myself unjust--and then, revenge
+ Upon this slanderer--I'm much perplex'd. [Goes off.]
+
+
+
+ SCENE II.
+
+ Changes to another room in Mr. ANDREWS's house.
+
+ Enter Mr. ANDREWS, leaning on THOMAS and another person; CONSTANTIA
+ attending him.
+
+ THOMAS. This outward room is large, the air more free.
+
+ ANDREWS. Faint!--very faint!--support me to yon couch. [They seat
+ him on a couch.]
+ I hop'd at length heav'n's goodness had determin'd
+ To give my soul its so long wish'd-for peace.
+
+ CONSTANTIA. Of late, these fierce attacks give fresh alarm.
+ Preserve him, heav'n,--O sir! behold your daughter.--
+
+ ANDREWS. Tir'd nature hath got respite for a while,
+ Yet weaken'd much--my final rest is near.
+ [To the servants.] Withdraw awhile; but wait within a call.
+ Constantia! stay; come nearer to your father.
+ Give me your hand, I wish a private conference
+ On somewhat of much moment ere we part.
+
+ CONSTANTIA. You make your daughter happy; for of late,
+ I've thought, you did not see me with that pleasure
+ To which I had been us'd; I, therefore fear'd,
+ You some distress had met, or that Constantia,
+ Had witlessly, (when some ill fate presided,)
+ The best of parents and of friends offended.
+
+ ANDREWS. You never did; it is against your nature.
+ You've ever been affectionate as dutiful;
+ But the postponing thus a second time
+ (And on lord Weston's side) the purpos'd wedding,
+ Which all must say, our station weigh'd with his,
+ Besides his princely qualities of mind,
+ Would highly honour us, disturbs me much:
+ Yet, wou'd I hope, th' affections of your heart
+ Are not so fix'd upon this noble youth,
+ you cou'd not wean them thence, shou'd it be fit.
+
+ CONSTANTIA. What is't I hear! undone! be still, my heart! [Aside.]
+ Hath not a letter, sir, disclos'd the cause?
+
+ ANDREWS. Such letter I receiv'd, yet it is said,
+ His uncle, the lord Belmour, hath of late,
+ Spoken of this, to which he once consented,
+ In terms of discontent; which, if as told,
+ I would to the alliance of an emperour,
+ Prefer the badge of want.
+
+ CONSTANTIA. [She kneels] O most indulgent!
+ Ever-honour'd sir! let not a thought for me
+ Distress your tenderness. Heav'n be my judge!
+ That did my faithful heart approve him more
+ (If possible) than I have truly told you,
+ And that its choice was not with your assent,
+ My task should be, to tear it thence for ever.
+ And, but I know lord Weston has a soul,
+ Possess'd of every virtue heav'n bestows,
+ I wou'd far rather wed in mine own rank,
+ Where truth and happiness are oft'ner found,
+ Than midst the glaring grandeur of the great.
+
+ ANDREWS. Come to thy father's arms, thou sweet resemblance
+ Of the perfections of your much-lov'd mother;
+ A loss each day felt more--yet, my Constantia,
+ What tho' your charms and virtue shou'd surpass
+ All that e'er center'd in a virgin frame,
+ To be the choice of this exalted youth
+ Causes a thousand fears in my fond heart.
+
+ CONSTANTIA. O sir! how you alarm me! heav'n! what fears?
+
+ ANDREWS. Constantia singled out, preferr'd to numbers
+ Of the first rank, who would exult to win him,
+ Will rouse up ev'ry baneful blast of envy,
+ Perfections such as thine ne'er 'scape malignity.
+
+ CONSTANTIA. The example of that honour to her sex,
+ My dear lost mother, with the wholesome lessons
+ Instill'd by you, will so direct my steps,
+ I may those blasts escape your fondness fears.
+
+ ANDREWS. Yet, should this change in your condition happen,
+ This also treasure in your mind; that man,
+ As in his frame, so is his spirit rough;
+ Whilst your more tender sex was form'd by heav'n,
+ To sooth those cares, which from his state still flow,
+ With winning grace, and smooth life's rugged paths.
+ That she who best submits will surest reign;
+ In youth be idolized, in age revered.
+ But when perverse contention marks her conduct,
+ And passion's transitory joys are pall'd,
+ The past offence will to the mind recur,
+ And all that once had charm'd be quite forgot.
+
+ CONSTANTIA. Good heav'n! of two such parents make me worthy.
+
+ Enter MARIA.
+
+ ANDREWS. Some message from my wife--withdraw awhile.
+
+ CONSTANTIA. [As she goes off] Alas! I fear some deep distress
+ affects him.
+
+ ANDREWS. Where is your mistress?
+
+ MARIA. In her chamber, sir.
+
+ ANDREWS. Go tell her I am here, and wish to see her.
+
+ MARIA. Good sir! she has been greatly indispos'd:
+ But somewhat eas'd, was in a friendly slumber,
+ Till rous'd at hearing that some sudden ailment
+ Had just now seiz'd you, she dispatch'd me hither,
+ And most impatient waits for my return
+ With tidings of your health, to her so precious.
+
+ ANDREWS. This woman is so hackney'd in all baseness,
+ That even truth from her would be disgrac'd. [Aside.]
+ Had her condition far exceeded all
+ Your seeming tender fears; or did I hear
+ The peal of her death bell, I shou'd not wonder.
+ Was she not up all night? Was ever seen
+ Such rapid havock as this life of riot
+ Spreads o'er her bloom, which ev'ry art abash'd,
+ Now vainly practis'd to repair its ruin!
+ Sad victim to the world's most baleful fashions!
+
+ MARIA. Some friends staid later here last night than usual.
+ But if you knew how much she's indispos'd,
+ I'm sure 'twould pierce your heart; as I well know,
+ You love her tenderly, as she does you.
+
+ ANDREWS. Wou'd I had lov'd her less, or ne'er had seen her!
+ Retire awhile, I pray--I wou'd be private.
+
+ MARIA. [As she goes off] We now shall execute the scheme I plann'd.
+
+ ANDREWS. I am the veriest wretch that breathes the air,
+ And nought but desperation is before me.
+
+
+ [A Servant BOY enters hastily at a different door,
+ as if passing to another room, with a letter in
+ his hand, starts, (as if at seeing his master)
+ and affects to conceal the letter.]
+
+ ANDREWS. You seem confus'd--What paper's that?
+
+ BOY. 'Tis, sir--'tis a letter--
+
+ ANDREWS. From whom? and to whom?
+
+ BOY. From, sir,--Why, 'tis--
+
+ [He seizes the boy's hand, who drops the letter, and whilst
+ his master is taking it up, runs off.]
+
+ ANDREWS. Ha! what, gone off! how guilt betrays itself!
+ Here is some secret scheme--'tis in my wife's hand.
+ The superscription to my old friend Wilson--
+ I never yet approv'd of opening letters
+ By any, save by those to whom address'd;
+ But to detect deceit, such means are just;
+ And here it seems, as matters were on foot,
+ With which, 'tis meant I should not be acquainted.
+ Besides, of late, I have at times surpriz'd them
+ in close and intimate discourse together;
+ When, it now strikes me, they seem'd much confounded.
+ Upon the whole, I think I ought to read it:
+ Necessity demands the doubtful deed. [He opens and reads the letter.]
+
+ "Sir,
+ I might have thought the repulse you so lately receiv'd,
+ with the declaration I then made of acquainting my husband
+ with your conduct, would have deterred you from ever making
+ any further attempt.--How fatal might the consequences prove
+ should I discover your behaviour to him? Is this your
+ friendship? Know, base man! that whatever my follies and
+ indiscretions may be in other respects, there is not any
+ distress shall lead me to an act against the honour of
+ Elizabeth Andrews."
+
+ Am I awake! or is this all a dream?
+ My friend--seduce my wife? it cannot be! [Looks again on the letter.]
+ It surely is her hand--it must be so.
+ She's now but in her prime, and few so beautiful--
+ Then his strict charge this morning, not to mention
+ What he himself had told me was reported
+ Of her and the lord Belmour, with this letter,
+ Are proofs which make this matter nearly certain.
+ What ruin is at hand!------ [He pauses.]
+
+ Enter MARIA hastily.
+
+ Woman, your business?
+
+ MARIA. My lady, sir, is up, and begs to see you;
+ Or she will wait on you.
+
+ ANDREWS. I choose the latter. [She goes off.]
+ How wond'rous condescending of a sudden!
+ Shou'd this be a true charge in this dread letter,
+ All he has mentioned of her and lord Belmour,
+ May be a base invention for his purpose--
+ Yet, may not both be true?--distracting state!
+
+ Enter Mrs. ANDREWS.
+
+ [He in profound thought, and not observing her.]
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. He heeds me not. The letter strongly works. [Aside.]
+ I've been inform'd, sir, that you wish'd to see me.
+ You seem disturb'd; acquaint me with the cause.
+
+ ANDREWS. Forbear to question me. I am not well.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. You yield too much to melancholy thoughts.
+
+ ANDREWS. True--Melancholy hath been long my portion;
+ As I've too long the fatal cause conceal'd:
+ But ev'ry duty now, to heaven, to you,
+ To my poor children, to myself, all, all
+ Demand it from the husband and the father,
+ That you, oh! you, are the sole, fatal cause. [She offers to
+ withdraw, he shuts the door.]
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. How your looks scare me! what have I committed?
+
+ ANDREWS. O! many things you should not have committed.
+ To number all the mischiefs which your conduct,
+ Your most misguided conduct hath induc'd
+ On those, to whom, each law divine and human
+ Had bound you in affection's strongest ties,
+ Were but a needless waste of time and speech.
+ [Aside] Heav'n! what contempt and scorn her looks betray!
+ O Gaming! cursed vice! parent of all!
+ How callous grow the hearts of all thy votaries!
+ And how hast thou this once soft bosom chang'd!
+ Nor is her form less alter'd than her mind.
+ [Turning to her] Perverse and obstinate! as adders deaf!
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Your words are not unheard.
+
+ ANDREWS. It matters not;
+ Without due heed, 'twere speaking to the winds.
+ Have you yet thought, how you could bear the change,
+ The bitter change from affluence to poverty,
+ Which ev'ry want will bring to your remembrance?
+ We both must in one ruin be involv'd.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. I know no life I lead that is not suited
+ To what I am entitled by my birth:
+ An honour, sir, of which you seem insensible.
+
+ ANDREWS. True honour only lies in virtuous deeds.
+ But had you been the daughter of a prince,
+ 'Twere fit you suitably demean'd yourself,
+ To that condition you had freely chosen.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. By gloomy minds, and years by ailments sour'd,
+ Remembring not past seasons in themselves,
+ Ev'n pleasures innocent are deem'd offence.
+
+ ANDREWS. No--no; it lies not in their decent use;
+ 'Tis the extreme that constitutes the fault,
+ By which, ev'n Virtue's sacred self might err;
+ But they who break a single law, would others,
+ If lured alike; so violate the whole.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Ha! is it come to this? arraign my virtue?
+
+ ANDREWS. This quick impatience is self-accusation.
+ I have not even hinted at it yet.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Whilst I am conscious of my own heart's innocence,
+ I scorn the censure of a slanderous world;
+ It cannot injure me.
+
+ ANDREWS. Soft! have a care.
+ No virtue with that thought is safe a moment.
+ O! 'tis a jewel of such brilliant lustre,
+ And so resistless wins the admiration,
+ That even vice, in its appearance mansk'd,
+ Pays homage at its shrine.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. What is't I hear?
+ I see th' ill-natur'd purpose of your summons.
+ But who are they, sir, who have dar'd traduce me?
+ Some, it is like, of your low-rank'd associates?
+
+ ANDREWS. This war of words is wandering from the purpose.
+ Now, mark me well--the man who dares insult
+ A woman's modesty, must have descry'd
+ Somewhat in her behaviour that would warrant
+ Such outrage of abuse.--Is this your hand? [Shewing her the letter.]
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Let me see it. [He gives her the letter,
+ which she reads hastily, then tears it to pieces.]
+ Now, let me tell you, sir,
+ 'Twas a base action to unclose this letter,
+ Or any other not to you address'd.
+ What a curs'd hellish plot hath here been schem'd
+ Against my peace! oh! oh! Maria--oh! [She faints upon the sofa.]
+
+ Enter MARIA.
+
+ MARIA. Alas! alas! my poor lady! good sir!
+ What hath she done to merit this unkindness?
+ You've always been the tenderest of husbands.
+
+ ANDREWS. Forbear this idle talk; attend your mistress.
+ [Aside] What fool was I to trust her with this letter!
+ Yet, why was she so hasty to destroy it?
+ Heav'n! in what deep perplexities I'm plung'd! [He goes off.]
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. What! gone! Leave me in the sad seeming state
+ In which I call myself!--and unconcern'd!
+ Would I had died before I wrote that letter!
+ Desperate act! I knew not what I did.
+
+ MARIA. Madam, despair not; this will soon blow over,
+ You're young and beauteous; he, in his decline.
+ You can command him, as best suits your pleasure;
+ But let not scruples rule you at this crisis:
+ In my poor judgment, 'twould undo us all.
+ Consult your friend, the faithful lady Belmour;
+ None can advise you better on this subject.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. O! but Maria, this is not the whole.
+ My ill success at play for some time past,
+ Hath far exceeded all hath yet befall'n me:
+ This hurried me to borrow of lord Belmour
+ A thousand pieces, which, with the several sums
+ I've lost to him (not small), must now be paid;
+ But above all,--ill fate! is the discovery
+ Of the false key to my wrong'd husband's chest:
+ Which must be so; as other locks are fix'd
+ On it, and every door that leads thereto.
+
+ MARIA. The work this, of my old officious husband. [Walks apart
+ and pauses.]
+ Now for due vengeance for the killing flights,
+ That youth, the scornful Jefferson, hath cast
+ On me, and my ill-fated fondness for him. [Returning.]
+ What think you of a further application
+ To the cashier; your worthy friend young Jefferson?
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. I cannot: he already hath assur'd me,
+ He dares not venture to supply me further.
+
+ MARIA. I doubt not but he told you so; and yet,
+ My hopes are surety still for his compliance.
+ There is no danger he'd not risk to serve you.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Whence comes this zeal?
+
+ MARIA. From a passion for you,
+ As violent perhaps, as e'er possess'd
+ The heart of man, and which he cannot hide.
+ You surely must have seen it? It destroys him.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. I have, 'tis true, observ'd him much confus'd
+ At times I spoke to him; but this, I thought,
+ Might have proceeded from a bashful modesty,
+ As I conceive his readiness to serve me,
+ Did from a generous spirit to oblige.
+
+ MARIA. I tell you, madam, 'tis the height of fondness.
+ A fever, that he lately had, in which
+ His ceaseless ravings were of you, confirm'd 'it.
+ He shuns all company, neglects his food,
+ And wanders often, as would one insane.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Astonishment!
+
+ MARIA. He cannot quit the house
+ His 'prenticeship has full two years expir'd,
+ And twice he hath prepar'd him for the Indies.
+ I know the inmost secrets of his soul:
+ Besides, of late, he's often much intoxicated,
+ Who was before the paragon of temperance.
+ Do but consent to let me call him hither;
+ One look from you will banish every fear,
+ Unlock each chest, and lay its stores before you.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Stop! at your peril stop! the very thought
+ Chills my whole blood--I'd perish first in want.
+
+ MARIA. Then you must quit your honourable friends,
+ And live for ever in forlorn obscurity.
+ But pardon me, if I've been too officious.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. My present calls require at least a thousand:
+ For though my fund be not quite exhausted,
+ Fortune hath made me bankrupt yet to numbers.
+ 'Tis true, that many are far more my debtors,
+ Yet are not all like me in payment punctual.
+ But I will instant haste to lady Belmour,
+ My faithful counsel in the time of trouble.
+
+ MARIA. As I could wish.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Then for awhile withdraw. [MARIA goes off.]
+ How dreadful now, is ev'n a moment's privacy!
+ How different from those happy hours of innocence,
+ When my sweet little ones were prattling round me,
+ With a fond husband and a tender father,
+ Pouring his blessings upon them and me!
+ But now I can no more endure to see them,
+ Than I can bear to look into myself.
+ How often hath he said, "One hour's remorse
+ Outweighs whole years of transitory joys!"
+ How true he spoke! but wherefore these reflections?
+ When every mischief hath been done already,
+ And cannot be recall'd!
+
+ Re-enter MARIA.
+
+ MARIA. Madam, the coach.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Be not you absent; I shall soon return,
+ And may have business of some moment with you.
+
+ MARIA. I fear we have too much on hand already. [Aside.] [They
+ go off.]
+
+
+
+ SCENE III.
+
+ Another room in Mr. ANDREWS's house.
+
+ JEFFERSON alone.
+
+ JEFFERSON. My actions must at length fall heavy on me,
+ And crush me at a blow: but oh! this passion,
+ This fruitless passion, I've so long indulg'd
+ For this enchanting woman, drives me on,
+ Alas! from one transgression to another,
+ And I deceive myself.--Ha! here's Maria.
+ Wou'd I cou'd shun her! as of late her visits
+ Have been more frequent than occasions warrant.
+ Yet much she hath profess'd herself my friend,
+ And my heart's secret won.
+
+ Enter MARIA.
+
+ MARIA. I disturb you.
+
+ JEFFERSON. Why to speak truly, I had just now sought
+ Some private intercourse with mine own heart.
+
+ MARIA. Of late, I think you use too much of that.
+ But if you knew from whom I am a messenger,
+ I also think, I should not be unwelcome.
+ But I'll withdraw.
+
+ JEFFERSON. No, speak your business quickly.
+
+ MARIA. Alas! my poor mistress!
+
+ JEFFERSON. What of her? speak------
+
+ MARIA. Fortune has been of late to adverse to her,
+ And she's become indebted to such numbers,
+ I fear she can no more appear in publick,
+ But must retire, unless your goodness serves her.
+ She often speaks with gratitude of Jefferson:
+ Did you but see in what distress she languishes,
+ You'd hazard worlds to minister relief.
+
+ JEFFERSON. Full well you know, how I'm inclin'd to serve her;
+ But her demands encrease with my compliance,
+ And I have injur'd much the best of masters.
+ I know no other banker cou'd support it.
+
+ MARIA. Most happy youth! there does not live another,
+ Of whom my mistress would have sought these favours.
+ O! cou'd I venture, I could say much more.--
+ Thus far however, I'll be bold to utter;
+ That were our worthy master gone to rest,
+ (And all observe he's every day declining)
+ You are the only man her heart would choose.--
+ But I have gone too far.
+
+ JEFFERSON. Transporting sounds!
+ My soul is all attention!--Pray proceed.
+
+ MARIA. I cannot--O! I must not.
+
+ JEFFERSON. Why?
+
+ MARIA. Her honour.
+
+ JEFFERSON. Say, are you truly serious in this matter?
+ Or, but amusing me with idle hopes?
+
+ MARIA. Pray have you ever found me such a trifler?
+
+ JEFFERSON. I cannot say I have, and yet----
+
+ MARIA. Yet, what?
+
+ JEFFERSON. Her virtue!
+
+ MARIA. Why you are virtuous, yet cannot avoid
+ This passion for the loveliest of women:
+ Nor may she be insensible to you.
+ No youth more wins our sex's admiration.
+ Among the rest, the beauteous, gentle Lucia,
+ In secret languishes: it is too plain:
+ Though ev'ry art be practis'd to conceal it.
+
+ JEFFERSON. Forbear this now. None prize her virtues more:
+ Nor am I to her outward charms insensible.
+ But when the heart is to one object wedded,
+ No lure can win it thence.------You flatter me?
+
+ MARIA. I don't.--You under-prize yourself.--View this.--
+
+ JEFFERSON. View what? [Eagerly]
+
+ MARIA. It is a locket with her precious hair,
+ Which she has sent by me. Refuse it not.
+
+ JEFFERSON. Refuse it!--O! whilst life exists I'll wear it,
+ Close to that heart which is for ever hers.
+ I am all ecstacy, delicious woman! [He kisses it.]
+
+ MARIA. [Aside.] A lucky hit, and works as I could wish.
+
+ JEFFERSON. Gratefully thank her for the precious token.
+
+ MARIA. And now as to her present exigencies?
+
+ JEFFERSON. To what may they amount?
+
+ MARIA. About a thousand.
+
+ JEFFERSON. 'Tis quite impossible.
+
+ MARIA. Less will not do.
+
+ JEFFERSON. Besides the mischief I have done my master,
+ I stand myself upon the verge of ruin.
+
+ MARIA. Were you to see her, you'd not lose a moment
+ In this last act, so be yourself the messenger.
+
+ JEFFERSON. First, tell her then, that she shall be supply'd,
+ Let the event be fatal as it may.
+
+ MARIA. Most gen'rous youth! she shall know all your goodness. [She
+ goes off.]
+
+ JEFFERSON. How quickly every resolution vanishes!
+ And how am I now chang'd from what I was!
+
+ Like some weak skiff, that for a while had stood
+ Safe on the tranquil bosom of the flood;
+ Until at length, the mountain torrents sweep
+ Its faint resistance headlong to the deep,
+ Where in large gulps the foamy brine it drinks,
+ And in the dread abyss for ever sinks. [Exit.]
+
+
+
+
+ACT III.
+
+
+
+ SCENE I.
+
+ A chamber in lord BELMOUR's house.
+
+ Lady BELMOUR at her toilet, her Waiting-woman attending.
+
+ Lady BELMOUR. How pale I look!
+
+ ATTENDANT. My lady rose too early.
+
+ Lady BELMOUR. Why, what's the time?
+
+ ATTENDANT. 'Tis past the noon, but it is scarce four hours
+ Since you lay down to rest. [A tap at the door]
+
+ Lady BELMOUR. Who can this be? [The ATTENDANT goes to
+ the door and returns.]
+
+ ATTENDANT. 'Tis Mrs. Andrews, madam, in her chariot.
+
+ Lady BELMOUR. What, at this hour?--and yet in truth no wonder,
+ That thus her rest's disturb'd. It would require
+ The wealth of India to support her losses.
+ And were she now possess'd of all its stores,
+ I and my friends cou'd rid her of the burthen.
+ Perhaps, she comes to pay me the five hundred
+ I won of her, when last we play'd together?
+ Or with the flattering hopes to make reprisals?
+ So I may double it before we part:
+ For she's unskill'd enough to lose a million.
+ Away!--I'll wait her in the damask chamber. [They go off
+ different ways.]
+
+
+
+ SCENE II.
+
+ Changes to another apartment.
+
+ Lady BELMOUR alone. Enter Mrs. ANDREWS.
+
+ Lady BELMOUR. My dearest Andrews! I rejoice to see you.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. I always found you friendly and obliging.
+
+ Lady BELMOUR. But why this gloom on that angelic face?
+ Why not as sprightly as you us'd to be?
+ Surely you'll not conceal the cause from me,
+ Whose wishes for you are sincere as earnest!
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. How happy am I in this honour'd favour!
+ You know my loss at play for some time past
+ Hath been prodigious; it hath reach'd my husband.
+
+ Lady BELMOUR. Were I in your case, that should not disturb me.
+ Is not the jealous dotard twice your age?
+ Such incidents shou'd more confirm my empire.
+ Nay, my offence shou'd be his accusation,
+ Nor wou'd I rest until he shou'd acknowledge
+ The fault was his, not mine; so, rouse your spirits.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Impossible, I've injur'd him too deeply;
+ Have lost with his esteem, his love for ever.
+
+ Lady BELMOUR. Then farewel further intercourse between us. [Aside]
+ Despond not thus, all will be well again.
+ I think you owe me just five hundred pieces?
+ Yet let not that disturb you in the least:
+ It may be in your power to pay me soon.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. I would not forfeit your regard and friendship,
+ For fifty times the sum.
+
+ Lady BELMOUR. Imagine not,
+ That I cou'd doubt your honour, were it thousands.
+ Your strict and constant perseverance in it,
+ Has won you the esteem and love of all;
+ And to convince you of my high opinion,
+ I'll hazard this five hundred with you now.
+ The day is early yet.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. O press me not;
+ My mind's too-much distress'd with what has happen'd;
+ But I have brought the honourable debt. [She takes out
+ several notes from a pocket-book.]
+ These make the whole, I think.
+
+ Lady BELMOUR. Most honour'd friend!
+ But may I trespass on your gen'rous spirit?
+ Your stock I see, is not a little weighty.
+ Cou'd you supply me with five hundred more
+ For a few hours? I have no doubt to treble them,
+ At a small party, I expect this instant:
+ And I'll repay them gratefully this evening
+ At lady Meldmay's, where we are to meet.
+ I, and three more this morning hold a bank;
+ In which, if you wou'd choose to share a chance,
+ Fortune perhaps might favour you this way.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Not now; but here's the further sum you wish for;
+ And fail not to repay it as you promise.
+ 'Tis but a part of what I owe to others.
+
+ Lady BELMOUR. I wou'd not disappoint you for the world.
+ My obligations are beyond expression.
+ Grant heav'n, your present troubles quickly vanish.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. And may you meet the fortune which you hope for!
+ [She goes off.]
+
+ Lady BELMOUR. 'Tis wonderful, how she acquires all this.
+ Her husband's ruin'd, my dissipated lord,
+ Most lavishly, I hear, supplies her wants;
+ Whilst even for domestic calls his purse
+ Is niggardly unclos'd; and what he spares,
+ Must be in strictest mode accounted for:
+ Nor does he know a pleasure, absent from her.
+ To keep this sum then, were but fair reprisals. [Exit.]
+
+
+
+ SCENE III.
+
+ Mr. ANDREWS's house.
+
+ Mr. ANDREWS and THOMAS.
+
+ ANDREWS. What monsters trust will make us when we yield
+ Our reason to its rage, and let it rule!
+ My neighbour! my companion! Oh! the man,
+ Whom I to serve, would have risk'd every blessing
+ To seek to wound me in the tenderest point!
+ Then, under friendship's show masking his treachery,
+ Endeavour falsely to accuse another--
+ Most infernal villain!
+
+ THOMAS. 'Tis impossible.
+ Say, is there one of more exalted virtues?
+ Or one who so esteems and honours you?
+
+ ANDREWS. Oh! my wife's letter proves beyond all question,
+ This breach of friendship, gratitude and honour.
+
+ THOMAS. All forgery.
+
+ ANDREWS. She did not deny it.
+
+ THOMAS. Where is it?
+
+ ANDREWS. I have it not, she tore it.
+
+ THOMAS. Tore it! how got she it?
+
+ ANDREWS. It matters not.
+
+ THOMAS. There's something more in this, than yet you know of.
+
+ ANDREWS. If any thing by chance hath reach'd your ear,
+ Against the safety ev'n of an enemy,
+ Stain not your fair repute with the foul secret.
+ The faithful tongue will utter what the heart
+ In justice prompts, though death were the event.
+
+ THOMAS. Then, sir, the letter is a black contrivance.
+ And would you now forgive this tell-tale honesty,
+ I shou'd not hesitate to name the forger.
+
+ ANDREWS. These intermissions aggravate the misery.
+
+ THOMAS. Prepare then for the shock. It was your wife.
+ Boldly I speak the truth; for much she's wrong'd,
+ If since she has been link'd with those high miscreants,
+ Who, whilst they plunder, hold her in derision,
+ Her foul's not ripe for ev'ry desp'rate project. [ANDREWS walks
+ about much disturb'd.]
+ Patience, good sir! I rest not on suspicion.
+
+ ANDREWS. Audacious wretch, away!--quick, shun my rage!
+
+ THOMAS. I meant you well. [Aside as he goes off.] How piteous
+ is his case! [Exit.]
+
+ ANDREWS. How can I meet him, and we both survive it!
+ Dread interval! would I had ne'er been born. [Goes off.]
+
+
+
+ SCENE IV.
+
+ Mr. ANDREWS's house.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS and MARIA.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Well, I believe if all my debts were paid,
+ I ne'er should hazard more.
+
+ MARIA. And so return
+ To the dull, lonely life you once pursued?
+ Forbid it your good angel! 'twould destroy you.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. O! but that life, Maria, was estrang'd
+ To those anxieties which haunt me now.
+ I cannot bear to be alone a moment.
+
+ MARIA. For that good reason, act like lady Belmour;
+ Like her be resolute, and scorn despair.
+
+ Enter a SERVANT.
+
+ SERVANT. Lord Belmour, madam, tenders his respects.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. [Aside.] How I dread these visits! Besides, of late,
+ He hath been more particular than usual;
+ So that it hath become the general notice.
+ [To the Servant.] Withdraw awhile. [To MARIA.] I will not be
+ at home.
+
+ MARIA. What, not to him?
+ That gallant, gen'rous nobleman! your friend!
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. A creditor for more than I can pay.
+
+ MARIA. Bless us! where are your boasted gains of late,
+ And where the sum you just receiv'd from Jefferson?
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Of late, I have miss'd notes for several sums.
+
+ Mar. I doubt she suspects me. [Aside.] Madam, 'tis like,
+ You've lent them to some friends?
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Of this again.
+ Have you yet rais'd the money on my jewels?
+
+ MARIA. The broker thinks the pledge is not sufficient.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. For three thousand! they cost that sum twice told.
+
+ MARIA. He'll not lend more than two.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. I must submit.
+ [Aside.] Shameful return this to the gen'rous donor!
+ Part was his present on our bridal day,
+ And part the day, he bore the city's honours.
+ He thought he never could enough adorn me.
+
+ MARIA. But we forget--his lordship waits admission.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. I cannot see him,--yet, shou'd I refuse it,
+ As my curs'd stars have destin'd me his debtor,
+ He may, perhaps, conceive, it want of honour.
+
+ MARIA. He scorns such thoughts; ev'n in his younger days,
+ as in his mien, so in all noble deeds,
+ Fair rumour tells, he was surpass'd by none.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Say, is your master in the house?
+
+ MARIA. No, madam.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Well then, this once.--How I abhor myself!
+ [MARIA goes off.]
+
+ Enter Lord BELMOUR.
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. How does my charming creditor this morning?
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Your debtor, I suppose you mean, my lord?
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. Thou never was't my debtor. I'm thy slave;
+ And in the pleasing chains would live for ever.
+ To view that lovely form! those radiant eyes,
+ And listen to the language of those lips!
+ What sum can be a recompense for these
+ O! that such matchless, such resistless beauty,
+ Shou'd be condemn'd to the cold arms of age
+ Or one of vulgar breed!--'tis--Oh! it is--
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. I know not what you mean. You talk in mystery.
+ [He attempts to take her hand, at which she seems
+ very uneasy, withdrawing it.]
+ My lord, I must beseech you to desist,
+ Or I must hence retire.
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. But hear me first.
+ This is a free discharge of all demands. [Produces a paper]
+ This other writing binds me, as your debtor,
+ In two thousand. [Produces another paper]
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. I see his base designs.
+ He seeks to take advantage of my wants. [Aside]
+ I need no further proofs of your intentions.
+ I have already heard too much. [She walks to and fro
+ much disorder'd.]
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. Too much!
+ 'Tis strange! what have you heard? that I do love,
+ Admire, adore you, O! beyond all utterance;
+ But why conceive, that I intend you injury?
+ Were my possessions as the globe extensive,
+ You might command the whole, as you may him,
+ Who lives, or dies, as you shall smile, or frown.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Into what mischiefs do you mean to plunge me?
+ Or wherefore do you dare insult me thus?
+ Is it because I'm wedded to a citizen,
+ (Forgetting that I am of your own kindred)
+ That you these liberties presume? Know, sir,
+ That through the world, an honest British trader
+ Esteem and honour meets. But, were I lower
+ Than vanity directs you to conceive me,
+ And you of the first rank; where freedom reigns,
+ You have no right to offer me such insult.
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. Talk not of rank to one who loves as I do;
+ The pride of kings beneath those eyes might languish,
+ And prostrate thus, and trembling wait their sentence. [He falls
+ on his knees, seizes her hand, which she forces from him.]
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. What have you seen in my deportment, sir,
+ To warrant this intrusion? 'tis unworthy.
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. Will you not then vouchsafe one glance of pity?
+ Is there no ray of hope; no room for pardon?
+ O, inexorable!
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Protect me, heav'n! [Aside]
+ Sir, at your peril, speak to me again.
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. Teach, teach me first, how this devoted heart,
+ Shall gain its freedom, or forget its fondness.
+ That voice conveys such rapture to my soul,
+ That I would hear it, though 'twere sure perdition.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. These hackney'd phrases, use to those they suit
+ To me, they are accumulated insults. [He rises.]
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. Forego such thoughts; I, nothing meant but honour.
+ My wife and I, having resolv'd to sunder,
+ (For without love we met, and so have liv'd,)
+ Hope ev'ry moment our divorce for ever;
+ When both may wed again, as each best likes;
+ A practice now full easily accomplish'd.
+ Then, that your husband's fate is near its period,
+ 'Tis said, some recent symptoms have pronounc'd
+ Wherefore, it soon may be my happy lot,
+ To make thee partner of my rank and fortune,
+ As thou'rt already empress of my heart.
+ --Accept then, I beseech thee, these small tokens.
+ [He gives her
+ the papers, which she, in great confusion, insensibly takes.]
+
+ And now with that sweet breath, surpassing far
+ The spicy perfume of the budding rose,
+ Pronounce the sentence of my life, or death.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. To what an abject state am I reduc'd!
+ The time has been, I'd not have heard a king
+ Discourse me thus. [Aside.]--I charge you, sir, desist.
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. I find 'tis vain to press my suit at present,
+ An humour this, to which 'twere better yield.
+ Best flatter it. [Aside.]--O! I am quite abash'd.
+ Your merited rebukes so awe my soul,
+ That I shall live from this day forth in penitence,
+ And adoration of your heav'nly virtues:
+ Let me then read in thy relenting eye
+ My peace restor'd, or seal my final doom!
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Your future conduct must determine it.
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. Permit me then, I pray-- [He seizes her hand,
+ and kisses it.]
+ We are to meet
+ At lady Meldmay's drawing-room to-night;
+ Till then--[Aside as he goes off.]--The prize is mine.
+ She now must yield.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Are these his papers? heav'n what have I done?
+ I'll instantly dispatch them after him
+ Yet that were dang'rous too; they might miscarry;
+ And then in person to return them to him,
+ May cause another interview between us.--
+ What mischiefs have I heap'd upon myself! [Goes off.]
+
+
+
+ SCENE V.
+
+ Mr. ANDREWS's house.
+
+ ANDREWS and JEFFERSON.
+
+ ANDREWS. What,--my old faithful steward!--O! impossible.
+ And yet, this finding of the secret key
+ Of the cash-chest, (with which he charg'd my wife)
+ And medals in his trunk--but then the letter,
+ Giving me information of this matter
+ Has not the writer's name--that causes doubt--
+ Then, his surprize, which seem'd so unaffected,
+ With his most firm behaviour, so unlike
+ The consciousness of guilt, when in his presence
+ They were discover'd there, favour him much.
+ Wherefore, till this affair be further canvass'd
+ I wou'd not fend him to a public prison. [He walks to and fro.]
+
+ JEFFERSON. I shall obey.--He never judg'd more justly. [Aside,
+ as he goes off.]
+
+ Enter a Servant, with a letter to Mr. ANDREWS, which he reads.
+
+ ANDREWS. The Speedwell cast away! a heavy loss!
+ Ills upon Ills in train pursue each other.
+ Heard you of this before?
+
+ JEFFERSON. Such rumour was
+ On the Exchange to-day, but not with certainty.
+
+ ANDREWS. However she's insur'd, and highly too.
+ Go fetch the policy, I wish to see it.
+ Or rather wait me in the compting-house.
+
+ JEFFERSON. [As he goes off] O heav'n! I gave the money to his
+ wife. [Exit.]
+
+ ANDREWS. He seem'd confus'd, and mutter'd to himself;
+ My fears anticipate some dread event.
+ But what of this? shou'd it be heav'n's high will,
+ That the remorseless billows should ingulf
+ The remnant of my wealth; yet this--all this,
+ I cou'd with patient resignation bear,
+ And toil with pleasure for an honest pittance.
+ But oh! to lose that precious, treasur'd gem,
+ Which my whole soul engross'd--to see another,
+ In my disgrace exult--yet more--yet more--
+ My children--oh my children--must ye suffer!
+ Away all thoughts of peace henceforth for ever. [Goes off.]
+
+
+
+ Scene VI.
+
+ Lord WESTON's apartments.
+
+ Lord BELMOUR and Lord WESTON.
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. Well, nephew, have you yet consider'd better
+ Of your love-frolick for the merchant's daughter?
+ You may meet numbers through this spacious city
+ With wealth superior far to her possessions;
+ Nor need you languish for their hearts a moment.
+
+ Lord WESTON. The common light shines not more unreserv'd;
+ Their very charms fatigue the public eye.
+ But, sir, my spirit scorns an easy conquest.
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. Fine founding words, yet answer not my question.
+ You too much from the world seclude yourself;
+ Which serves to add fresh fuel to the flame.
+ Long have I been, as I may say, your parent,
+ And have at present in my thoughts for you,
+ A wife well suited to your rank and fortune.
+
+ Lord WESTON. Thanks, my good lord! I doubt not your kind wishes;
+ But here, where all life's happiness depends,
+ Permit me to determine for myself.
+ True joys dwell only with united hearts,
+ And solitude is far the wiser choice
+ Than wedlock where domestic bliss is absent.
+ How vain is then the hope of such delights
+ With those of Fashion's stamp, whose only merit,
+ Is, that they are of this all-conqu'ring sex,
+ Of ev'ry other excellence regardless?
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. Again, young lord, I tell you, shou'd you wed
+ With the first merchant's daughter of the world,
+ 'Twould to your lineage be disgrace for ever.
+
+ Lord WESTON. Disgrace lies only in the want of virtue,
+ That excellence, in which she most abounds.
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. How long have you surrender'd to this dotage?
+
+ Lord WESTON. Almost from infancy; for even then,
+ A mutual sympathy inspir'd our souls;
+ Which first commenc'd in her good father's house,
+ (Whom I then serv'd,) when all I knew of love,
+ Was that her presence ever gave me pleasure,
+ As did her absence pain--I even thought,
+ The air blew sweeter from the place she breath'd.
+ But when her heav'nly mind disclos'd its beauties,
+ My heart then fix'd beyond the power of change.
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. All, all romance, with which your head seems fill'd.
+ But briefly to decide this matter, know,
+ 'Tis now full thirty summers since I wedded,
+ Yet have not had one offspring to inherit
+ My large possessions, which I can bestow,
+ As best my pleasure suits: and you're the one,
+ Who in my mind stands fairest for adoption;
+ My heir apparent, as my next a-kin.
+ Reflect too, that your income is unequal
+ To that high rank in life, it shou'd support.
+
+ Lord WESTON. The more I lose, the more I prize myself,
+ In persevering thus---but, my lov'd uncle!
+ What can impede the progress of my bliss,
+ When your consent hath sanctified my choice?
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. What though I yielded once to your fond suit,
+ It is now rumour'd, and by all believ'd,
+ Not only that her father is reduc'd
+ To bankruptcy and want, but that the whole
+ Of the large fortune which an uncle left her
+ Is wasted with the rest.
+
+ Lord WESTON. Is this her fault?
+ Is she to suffer for another's act?
+ Constantia hath that ever-during worth,
+ Which wealth or grandeur's glitter far outweighs:
+ That heav'nly mind, which will, when time hath cool'd
+ The fever of the heart, and reason rules,
+ Cause mutual friendship and domestic blessing.
+ But shou'd ev'n this misfortune be as rumour'd,
+ I have this one occasion more of proving
+ My constancy, and how I prize her virtues;
+ Then, to secure for ever that esteem
+ By me preferr'd to all terrestrial blessings.
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. Infatuated boy! you form perfections
+ Which only have existence in your fancy.
+ But pray, consider, what the world will say.
+
+ Lord WESTON. The world! base world! to censure gen'rous deeds;
+ You mean, perhaps, my lord, those slaves of fashion,
+ Who barter real for fictitious happiness;
+ Alas! Their judgment is not worth a thought:
+ If I'm approv'd of by the wife and honest,
+ I shall be happy, and despise that world,
+ Where virtue is discourag'd,--vice exalted,--
+ Corruption an adopted cherish'd system,
+ And ev'ry manly sentiment extinguish'd.
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. For shame, young lord, call reason to your aid!
+
+ Lord WESTON. From beauty only, it might have preserv'd me;
+ But reason is Constantia's ceaseless advocate.
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. Once more forsake her, if you prize my favour,
+ The world's esteem, or your own future welfare.
+ Away to distant regions; seek improvement;
+ There is no love that absence cannot cure.
+
+ Lord WESTON. Absence!--No death transcends that thought.--O sir!
+ My fondness is to such excess, so true,
+ That were heav'n's bliss assur'd me to forsake her,
+ My soul might tremble for its own resolve.
+ But what would worlds be worth with loss of honour!
+ With loss of peace, its constant sure attendant!
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. Since then all soothing arguments are fruitless;
+ 'Tis fit t' apprize you that you yet remain
+ Under my wardship by your father's will;
+ And now to wed would be by law a nullity.
+
+ Lord WESTON. Unrighteous, partial law! whose keen restraint
+ 'Gainst female innocence alone is pointed,
+ Whilst villains riot in its spoils unpunish'd;
+ So that love's chaste, connubial joys no more,
+ On its fleet wings, but in the tardy pace
+ Of sordid interest move. But, thank kind heaven!
+ My will is free to choose; else, my good lord,
+ The parish proofs deceive.
+ Lord BELMOUR. Perish all love!
+ That one of the first families in Britain,
+ Shou'd by such whims of folly be dishonour'd!
+ A moment more, and I shall lose all patience! [He goes off hastily.]
+
+ Lord WESTON. It grieves my soul that we should differ thus:
+ He still has acted as a tender parent
+ To me an orphan to his care intrusted.
+ But pride and pageantry engross him wholly;
+ With these, an avaricious selfish passion,
+ For some years past hath quite possess'd his heart,
+ And stagnated the streams of its benevolence,
+ Save where by humour, or by pleasure prompted.
+
+ But no mean views shall ever make me fight
+ The sacred vows of love I once did plight.
+ The heart that's true, will still remain the same
+ Though crosses press, they but refine the flame
+ And more sure joys the virtuous passion wait
+ With calm content, than with the pomp of state. [Exit.]
+
+
+
+
+ACT IV.
+
+
+
+ SCENE I.
+
+ A room in Mr. GOODWIN's house.
+
+ GOODWIN and WILSON.
+
+ WILSON. This letter just now brought from our friend Andrews,
+ Is superscrib'd to me, and yet most surely,
+ By its contents, it was design'd for you. [Gives him the letter,
+ which he reads.]
+
+ GOODWIN. What proof this of his sad distracted state!
+ Nor wonder; his distress encreases hourly.
+ Midst which, one of his ships, it is reported,
+ with a rich cargo, fraught from India's shores,
+ Was lately wreek'd; and that by some neglect,
+ It had not been insur'd.--'Tis rumour'd too,
+ That some of his acceptances are noted.
+
+ WILSON. Most true, I have myself paid several;
+ The just return to him, who, from his friends,
+ His purse on like occasion ne'er with-held.
+
+ GOODWIN. His bosom glows with all the heav'nly feelings
+ Of gen'rous amity and social love.
+ So boundless too, he cou'd not rest and know,
+ That ev'n a worthy stranger felt distress.
+
+ Enter a SERVANT and delivers a letter to Mr. Goodwin,
+ which he opens and peruses.
+
+ 'Tis all a mystery; or perfect madness.
+ It can't be meant for me. [To the SERVANT.] Where got you this?
+
+ SERVANT. Your neighbour Andrews sent it to your house.
+
+ GOODWIN. Do you withdraw. [SERVANT withdraws.] I pray you
+ hear it read. [Reads out.]
+
+ "That you are the blackest of all villains you must
+ yourself admit. What, induce me to suspect my wife
+ with another (as you did this morning) in order to
+ carry on your own adulterous schemes? such an attempt
+ against my honour, peace of mind, and all that is most
+ dear to me! If you regard your safety you will be
+ cautious of our meeting.
+
+ "James Andrews"
+
+ WILSON. Give me the letter, 'twas design'd for me.
+ Some like discourse as is in part there hinted,
+ This morning pass'd between us--Give it, pray.
+
+ GOODWIN. 'Tis plain, two misdirections have been written;
+ Yet, let me stipulate this one condition,
+ That you command yourself; for 'twill require
+ Your utmost fortitude. [Gives the letter.]
+
+ WILSON. By heav'n! some stratagem,
+ Of deep and black contrivance is on foot;
+ For there's no mischief, but that artful woman
+ Hath heart and head to scheme.
+
+ Enter a SERVANT.
+
+ SERVANT. [To GOODWIN.] Sir, your friend Andrews.
+
+ GOODWIN. [To WILSON.] And do you choose to meet him?
+
+ WILSON. Shou'd I shun him,
+ It might induce him to conclude me guilty.
+
+ GOODWIN. [To his SERVANT.] You--conduct him hither. I dread
+ the event. [SERVANT goes off.]
+ And yet well know your fortitude and temper.
+
+ WILSON. Fear not.--I pity him; he's much disturb'd.
+
+ Enter Mr. ANDREWS.
+
+ ANDREWS. [To GOODWIN.] Did you receive some lines from me to-day?
+
+ GOODWIN. To my surprize I did, which I suppose
+ By the contents were otherwise intended.
+
+ ANDREWS. Most strange mistake! I wrote them for that villain.
+
+ WILSON. Ha! villain in my teeth, what mean you, sir?
+
+ ANDREWS. Have you not wrong'd me? injur'd me most basely?
+
+ WILSON. Unhappy man! 'twas never in my thoughts.
+
+ ANDREWS. By heav'n, 'tis false! [To GOODWIN.] You have perus'd
+ my letter.
+
+ GOODWIN. I have by accident, as I inform'd you.
+
+ ANDREWS. Is he not then the blackest of all villains?
+
+ WILSON. Licentious railer, cease your foul invective,
+ Nor patience press too far: but for that amity,
+ In which we've liv'd, I cou'd not have endur'd
+ Ev'n half of this unmerited ill-treatment.
+ Again, I tell you, I'm an utter stranger
+ To ev'ry charge in your impassion'd letter,
+ Nor know I what it means.
+
+ ANDREWS. Again, 'tis false.
+
+ GOODWIN. O! my good friends, forbear; I've heard too much.
+ Permit me then to speak between you both.
+ What is affirm'd on one side, on the other
+ As firmly is denied: wherefore, it lies
+ On him who made the charge to shew his proof.
+
+ ANDREWS. Then, at your instance only;--'twas a letter,
+ From my ill-fated wife to this deceiver,
+ Which on the way by accident I seiz'd;
+ Wherein th' attempts he made (advantage taking
+ Of the distress her indiscretion caus'd)
+ To his adult'rous purpose to seduce her,
+ Are manifest.
+
+ WILSON. Deluded, undone man!
+ How this insidious woman hath depriv'd him
+ Of that sage judgment which he once possess'd!
+
+ GOODWIN. Where is the letter?
+
+ ANDREWS. Unluckily destroy'd.
+
+ WILSON. And are these all the grounds on which you charge
+ An old and faithful friend with such a breach
+ Of virtue, honour, and of all that's worthy?
+ O most abandon'd woman! weak as wicked.
+
+ ANDREWS. Recal your words, base slanderer, else this hand
+ Shall pluck forth the rude tongue that utter'd them.
+
+ GOODWIN. Forbear, I pray! you will alarm my family.
+
+ WILSON. [To GOODWIN.] This is too much for ev'n
+ a brother's bearing.
+ Nor can I longer answer for myself. [Goes off.]
+
+ ANDREWS. [After remaining for some time deep in thought.]
+ Guilty! O guilty! every thing confirms it.
+ Had my sworn enemy distress'd me thus,
+ Time might have sooth'd the anguish of my soul;
+ But oh! what mode of patience can endure
+ To find the traitor in my bosom friend!
+
+ GOODWIN. Rather think him innocent.
+
+ ANDREWS. Yet how?
+ Did not the blush of conscience mark his visage?
+ The thought, the very thought, inflames to madness.
+
+ GOODWIN. He seem'd surpriz'd, but shew'd no sign of guilt.
+ 'Twere better sure, to sift this matter calmly;
+ Passion but mars the purpose it pursues.
+
+ ANDREWS. O! cou'd I hope for doubt!
+
+ GOODWIN. You've known him long?
+
+ ANDREWS. These thirty years; no brothers e'er lov'd better:
+ And so exalted was, so pure the friendship,
+ Which 'twixt our souls in harmony subsisted,
+ Each knew no joy the other did not feel,
+ And all our evils were by sharing lighten'd:
+ He was my second self, as I was his,
+ Like streams whose currents mix and flow together.
+
+ GOODWIN. And have you ever found him in a falsehood?
+
+ ANDREWS. In his fidelity I so confided,
+ That with the dearest treasure of my soul
+ I had entrusted him--and now he's lost;
+ For ever lost--yet, yet to think--O heav'n!
+ That this unhappy woman, once so virtuous,
+ Cou'd ever thus have chang'd. O Goodwin! Goodwin!
+ There's not a peasant in the clay-built hut,
+ Who daily with his toil-tir'd arm acquires
+ A scanty pittance for life's common wants,
+ Whose state is not a paradise to mine!
+
+ GOODWIN. Despond not thus, there's nothing certain yet;
+ Wherefore, compose awhile your ruffled spirit,
+ And bear with manly fortitude these trials:
+ The tempest may th' inferior regions shake,
+ Whilst those of higher sphere rest undisturb'd
+ Above the threaten'd ruin!
+
+ ANDREWS. [After some pause.] Oh! tell me then, what says
+ report of her?
+
+ GOODWIN. A dangerous request!
+
+ ANDREWS. But cou'd you see your friend so deeply wrong'd?
+ Wrong'd in the tenderest point! and yet be silent?
+ What says the world of this lord Belmour's visits?
+ You start--
+
+ GOODWIN. Its rumours may be false--however,
+ Since you so press it, I will thus far venture--
+ Suppose, that after you have left the city,
+ To sleep as usual at your rural dwelling,
+ This, or some other night, you should return?
+ And at some near-appointed station wait,
+ Until some friendly watch, whom you can trust,
+ Shall give you notice of the secret visit?
+
+ ANDREWS. Thanks for this hint, it shall be so this night.
+
+ GOODWIN. Mean while, you must be calm, or may prevent
+ The purposes you covet to accomplish. [They go off.]
+
+
+
+ SCENE II.
+
+ Mr. ANDREWS's house.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS and MARIA.
+
+ MARIA. Alas! what shall I do? 'tis I, 'tis I,
+ That should be punish'd.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Punish'd! for what?
+
+ MARIA. I've brought my husband to a shameful end.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Why this alarm? explain the mystery.
+
+ MARIA. Your safety only, and a rash resentment
+ (Not dreaming of the fatal consequence)
+ Made me convey the key into his trunk.
+ And Jefferson by note, without his signature,
+ Inform'd your husband he shou'd find it there.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Suspend, I pray you, your distress awhile.
+ As yet, he's but imprison'd in his room:
+ You know my husband has a tender heart,
+ And loves him much.
+
+ MARIA. Alas! his doom is fix'd:
+ With everlasting infamy to wait
+ On him, and his, how innocent soever;
+ Nor shall I 'scape the bitter tongue of scandal.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Ere that shou'd happen, I'd accuse myself.
+ Again then, I beseech you, be compos'd.
+ And now, Maria, I've been just inform'd,
+ That Jefferson withdrew some hours ago,
+ And is not to be found.
+
+ MARIA. And what of this?
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Shou'd it be true, it must be thought by all,
+ That the discovery of the secret key
+ Was schem'd by him alone to screen himself.
+
+ MARIA. You've quite reviv'd my spirits with the thought.
+ I think the whole is like to fall on Jefferson.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. This night, I am to be at lady Meldmay's;
+ But lady Belmour claims my first attention.
+
+ MARIA. I thought that those unfortunate discoveries
+ Had lower'd your spirits so, you had resolv'd
+ To keep at home this night.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Your hit is just.
+ But it is now too late to send excuse.
+ Where's my husband?
+
+ MARIA. He left the city, early.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. 'Tis time to dress--attend me at my toilet------
+ [They go off.]
+
+
+
+ SCENE III.
+
+ Mr. ANDREWS's house.
+
+ LUCIA alone.
+
+ LUCIA. I but now met him, and methought he shunn'd me.
+ Unusual this from his most gentle nature.
+ But deep distress seem'd on his brow imprinted,
+ And rumours are unkind to him of late,
+ Though none stood higher once in fair repute.
+ O Jefferson! would I cou'd tear thee hence,
+ From this fond heart, and its lost peace restore!---
+ But soft! I hear my dear Constantia's voice.
+
+ Enter CONSTANTIA.
+
+ CONSTANTIA. O Lucia! I'm of women most unhappy;
+ No more must I of that chos'n youth have hope,
+ In whom my ev'ry thought, my soul is center'd.
+
+ LUCIA. You quite astonish me--it cannot be.
+ Even the day was fix'd for your espousals.
+
+ CONSTANTIA. O! but lord Belmour, his relentless uncle,
+ Hath just now charg'd my father, that henceforth
+ His visits here be countenanced no more;
+ Vowing most solemnly, that shou'd we wed,
+ He'd disinherit him. Besides in speech
+ He hath much flighted us.
+
+ LUCIA. Most distressful!
+
+ CONSTANTIA. From such examples, Lucia, we may learn
+ To dread those prospects of illusive fortune,
+ Which shew like havens on a treach'rous shore,
+ And lure us to our ruin.
+
+ LUCIA. Happy man!
+ How by the tyrant custom art thou favour'd!
+ Canst speak the anguish of the love-sick heart,
+ And from the hand that wounds implore relief:
+ Whilst we in silent secrecy must shelter
+ The deadly shaft, that rooted rankles there,
+ And wastes the virgin bloom. Nor is this all;
+ Should but the modest blush, the fault'ring speech,
+ Or the disorder of the conscious soul,
+ Betray the fondness it would fain conceal;
+ Not only cold indifference, but neglect,
+ Is full too oft the base return we meet.--
+
+ CONSTANTIA. Ha! Lucia! whence these fears? am I despis'd?
+ What have I done! I have betray'd myself.
+ O! I conjure thee, by the sacred tie
+ Of honour, friendship, confidence and love,
+ Speak nought of this, but leave me to despair!
+
+ LUCIA. Alas! 'tis my poor heart betrays itself. [Aside]
+ Why to despair? by all those sacred ties!
+ Thou wert not in my thoughts in what I've utter'd.
+ Hath yet lord Weston heard these fatal tidings?
+
+ CONSTANTIA. Full well you know how long he hath been absent:
+ 'Tis that distracts my soul.--How hath he vow'd,
+ That if a day pass'd by, and we asunder,
+ He felt it as the absence of an age!
+
+ LUCIA. My dear Constantia! banish all such thoughts.
+ He hath a soul superior to all falsehood.
+ Affairs, 'tis said, of moment call'd him hence,
+ And his return is ev'ry hour expected.
+
+ CONSTANTIA. True, he is all that's gen'rous, great and noble,
+ All that stirs envy and respect in man,
+ Or love in woman. O my friend, my Lucia!
+ Thou know'st not half the fondness of mine heart:
+ Oft have I wish'd (so will love's fancy rave)
+ That he had been the guardian of a flock,
+ And I the sovereign of unbounded realms,
+ To make him partner of that heart and throne:
+ Or that we had been rear'd, 'midst rural innocence,
+ A low, yet happy pair; with what delight,
+ My tender frame had shared the harvest toil,
+ To close with intercourse of souls the day!
+
+ Enter a SERVANT.
+
+ SERVANT. Madam, lord Weston's in the anti-chamber.
+
+ CONSTANTIA. [To the SERVANT] Withdraw awhile-- [He withdraws.]
+ Be still, my flutt'ring heart!
+ Haste, Lucia, if thou lov'st me, make excuse:
+ Say, I am indispos'd--retir'd--yet stay.
+ Why thus conceal the truth which must be known?
+ Tell him, I cannot, must not, dare not see him--
+ Yet, stay again--where is my father now?
+
+ LUCIA. I know not; he went forth some hours ago.
+
+ CONSTANTIA. 'Tis fit, lord Weston knows my father's orders,
+ That I no more admit his visits here.
+ Say, what would you advise? pause not, but speak.
+
+ LUCIA. I'd see him, for the reason you have mention'd;
+ Not rashly cast away a gem so precious.
+
+ CONSTANTIA. How soon we yield to that the heart approves!
+ Who waits without? [Enter a SERVANT] Conduct lord Weston hither.
+
+ Enter Lord WESTON. LUCIA withdraws.
+
+ Lord WESTON. Am I so bless'd to view thee once again!
+ O! my Constantia, could'st thou but conceive
+ What I have suffer'd in this tedious absence,
+ Of which the cause hath been conceal'd from thee!
+ Yet, whilst I languish'd on the verge of fate,
+ Thy image ne'er forsook my tortur'd fancy,
+ And its wild ravings were of nought but thee.
+
+ CONSTANTIA. Would heav'n this interview had not been now! [Aside]
+
+ Lord WESTON. Ha! not a word! not even a look this way!
+ All ailments, every pang were ease to this.
+ I read some dreadful sentence in thine eye.--
+ What mean those shiverings?------Why that look of anguish?
+ Sure, cruelty ne'er wore a form like thine!
+
+ CONSTANTIA. What can I say? my tongue denies its office. [Aside]
+ My lord, you have by this untimely visit,
+ Led me to break my father's strict injunction.
+ A father, dear as my heart's vital drops.
+
+ Lord WESTON. What do I hear? O! are we not united?
+ By sacred, mutual, faithful vows united?
+ Of which I now am come to claim performance.
+
+ CONSTANTIA. It is forbid--forbid, most sure, for ever!
+ I'm but the daughter of a bankrupt citizen,
+ (Th' ungentle terms with which I am reproach'd,)
+ Of whom, shou'd you think more--
+
+ Lord WESTON. What is't you mean?
+
+ CONSTANTIA. Lord Belmour would renounce you then for ever;
+ And 'tis most fit, my lord, you should comply.
+ He is your uncle, and can much befriend you.
+
+ Lord WESTON. O my Constantia! cruel, dear Constantia!
+ Can'st thou conceive that any earthly views,
+ Could for the loss of thee requite an heart,
+ That cannot form a bliss from heav'n without thee?
+ By that chaste passion, which no time can alter!
+ Not mines of wealth, nor all life's splendid pomp,
+ Can weigh with me against that worth of soul,
+ With which thou art enrich'd so far above
+ All others of thy sex I yet have seen,
+ Far as thy beauteous form excels them all.
+ Do but pronounce a peril, or a suffering
+ To prove my constancy, save loss of thee.
+
+ CONSTANTIA. My lord, these honours far exceed my merit.
+
+ Lord WESTON. By heav'n! this coldness may to madness drive me.
+ Am I to suffer for another's rashness,
+ Of which, the new-born babe is not more innocent?
+ Perhaps, some other hath usurp'd thine heart?
+ 'Tis plain; too plain--You cannot doubt my truth!
+
+ CONSTANTIA. Do not distress me thus--you know my heart;
+ As well you know, that on that truth alone
+ I would repose my ev'ry hope in life.--
+
+ Lord WESTON. Then haste thee with me, and for ever bless me:
+ A reverend priest attends to do the office,
+ To which your father hath long since consented.
+
+ CONSTANTIA. Oh! oh! forbear,--I shudder at the thought.
+ I've told you all--You know a parent's right;
+ Parent, not only of my life, but mind,
+ Wherein he every wholesome seed implanted,
+ And watch'd with never ceasing care their growth.
+
+ Lord WESTON. Nor hath the soil been faithless to its trust.
+
+ CONSTANTIA. Could you then hope from an unduteous daughter,
+ To meet in wedded state, the due compliance
+ Heav'n hath ordain'd, or I expect its blessings?
+ You would yourself on serious thoughts condemn me.
+
+ Lord WESTON. [He falls on his knees.] How far thou soar'st
+ above all human excellence!
+ And how thy virtues raise those peerless charms!
+ I have transgress'd---but Oh! vouchsafe thy pity!
+ It was the zeal of fondness, and the fear
+ Of losing thee, that urg'd me to the question,
+ Which hath thy delicacy so offended.
+
+ CONSTANTIA. O! if you ever lov'd me--prize my peace!
+ Go, whilst my wav'ring heart can hold its purpose.
+ These tell-tale eyes proclaim an interest there,
+ Which time or fortune never can erase.
+ But now this meeting might to both prove fatal.
+
+ Lord WESTON. Wipe, wipe away that tear! thy sovereign pow'r
+ Needs not an aid to bid my heart obey.
+ Yet, O permit me, like the sentenc'd criminal,
+ Who dreads the fatal stroke, awhile to parley!
+ But go where e'er I may, my heart will bear
+ The dear impression of thy image on it,
+ Nor time nor absence ever shall efface it. [He goes off.]
+
+ CONSTANTIA. How have I suffer'd by this forc'd behaviour,
+ Gainst my soul's feelings, to this matchless youth!
+ But O! in what enchanting, phrase, he urg'd
+ His love, his fears and never-failing constancy!
+ I cannot rest, till Lucia knows it all. [She goes off.]
+
+
+
+ SCENE IV.
+
+ Lord BELMOUR's house.
+
+ To Lady BELMOUR, enter a SERVANT.
+
+ SERVANT. Mrs. Andrews waits upon your ladyship.
+
+ Lady BELMOUR. Mrs. Andrews!--why did you admit her?
+
+ SERVANT. I had conceiv'd it was your general order.
+
+ Lady BELMOUR. I've chang'd my mind--I will not be at home;
+ yet stay a little--tell her, I shall see her,
+ At lady Meldmay's drawing-room to-night. [He goes off.]
+ 'Tis like, she comes for what I got this morning:
+ All which and more ill fortune swept away.
+
+ Enter Mrs. ANDREWS.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. What! my good friend! my dearest lady Belmour!
+ Not see her Andrews! her most faithful Andrews!
+ 'Tis some mistake? perhaps, the servant's fault?
+
+ Lady BELMOUR. He had my orders, though you thus intrude.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Such a behaviour!--I am all amazement.--
+ Whence is the cause? I pray explain yourself.
+
+ Lady BELMOUR. If, madam, you are bent on altercation,
+ I speedily shall leave you to yourself.
+ So to your business, brief.--
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. As you could wish;
+ Then, the five hundred you this morning borrow'd.
+
+ Lady BELMOUR. You surely dream, or are not in your senses!
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. If I retain them long, 'tis not your fault.
+ Lady Belmour! Honour!--
+
+ Lady BELMOUR. Ha! this from you!
+ When persons of my station condescend
+ To such connexions, they most justly merit
+ The treatment you have now presum'd to offer.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. You cannot surely mean to rob me thus?
+
+ Lady BELMOUR. To rob you! you mistake; you owe me more
+ Than will be ever in your pow'r to pay.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. For what I pray?
+
+ Lady BELMOUR. You are not ignorant.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. I am, as I shall answer it to heaven.
+
+ Lady BELMOUR. Not only for my husband's fond affection,
+ But his fortune; which, (tis well known to all)
+ He lavishes on you--so that your visits
+ Can but reflect dishonour; wherefore, cease them.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. [Going off.] This is too much; ungrateful,
+ faithless woman! [She goes off.]
+
+ Lady BELMOUR. This treatment may hereafter serve her much.
+ Even the meanest with the highest vie:
+ Their manners as their fashions vainly aping,
+ As might provoke the sourest spleen to laughter. [Exit.]
+
+
+
+ SCENE V.
+
+ An inn on Cornhill near Mr. ANDREWS's house
+
+ MARIA to the HOSTESS.
+
+ MARIA. Madam, a ticket from this inn informs me,
+ That some one in the house has wish'd to see me.
+
+ HOSTESS. A person in a common peasant's habit,
+ Came here some moments since and sent for you,
+ Upon some pressing business, as he told me.
+
+ MARIA. Is he here now?
+
+ HOSTESS. He is; I'll shew the room. [They go off.]
+
+
+
+ SCENE VI.
+
+ Changes to a back room.
+
+ Lord BELMOUR in the habit of a countryman, and MARIA.
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. Am I not well disguis'd?
+
+ MARIA. Lord Belmour!--Wondrous!
+ You might have pass'd me twenty times unknown.
+ But pray, my lord, the purpose of this meeting?
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. First say, how fares it with your lovely mistress?
+
+ MARIA. Her present troubles are beyond expression.
+ Oh! her distress is great.
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. I'm on the rack.
+ My fortune, life, my all's at her command.
+ Unfold yourself, if you regard my peace.
+
+ MARIA. Know then, her very ill success at play,
+ (Which has of late ev'n all conception pass'd)
+ Hath led her to use means, and such assistance,
+ That she some honourable claims might answer,
+ As otherwise she would have shudder'd at.
+ And many a tale has reach'd her husband's ear.
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. As I could wish. [Aside.] Unmerited ill fortune!
+
+ MARIA. Oh! but this is not all.
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. 'Tis, 'tis too much.
+ Yet would I know the whole, that I may fly
+ On expedition's wing to her relief.--
+ Speak on.--
+
+ MARIA. I cannot.
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. Torture me no further.
+
+ MARIA. Alas! my master cruelly hath charg'd her,
+ (How shall I name it!) with indecent conduct;
+ But chiefly, sir, with you.
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. Most fortunate!
+ This will outrun whole years of fond entreaty--[Aside]
+ Ungen'rous, false accuser! thus to treat
+ The loveliest of her sex; but first, Maria,
+ We must relieve her from her present exigencies;
+ With which somewhat acquainted, I, her friend,
+ (None more sincere) am with the means prepar'd;
+ And 'twas for that alone I schem'd this meeting.
+ But for the purpose, you must so contrive it,
+ As to convey me to her chamber secretly,
+ This very night.
+
+ MARIA. Heav'n! how you frighten me!
+ I would not for the world do such an act.
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. Your fears are without cause; I mean it only,
+ Lest any prying babbler might observe us,
+ At such late hour, as we must be together.
+ And I can have none other opportunity,
+ Of giving her the quick relief she needs.
+ Wherefore, her friend must serve her at this juncture.
+ I know your faithful heart.--
+
+ MARIA. O! but my lord.--
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. Behold these two, Maria; [Shews her two purses]
+ each of these
+ Contains an hundred pieces; one of them,
+ You must vouchsafe at present to accept;
+ The other, trust me, shall be also yours,
+ Soon as I safely gain the wish'd-for station. [Puts one
+ of the purses into her hand.]
+ Your master left the city just at sunset?
+
+ MARIA. My lord! my lord!
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. You must, you shall accept it.
+
+ MARIA. Well, my good lord, to save my injur'd mistress--[She
+ puts up the purse in her pocket.]
+ The backway thro' the warehouse is the safest,
+ When the moon's down; for 'twill be late to-night,
+ When she returns from lady Meldmay's supper.
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. As sure as I exist--till then farewell! [He goes off.]
+
+ MARIA. To what have I agreed?--Yet why repent?
+ If not temptation proof, it matters not,
+ When first she fails, or by whose means it happens;
+ If she refills, I'll stand out to the last,
+ And swear a thousand oaths, that I am innocent.
+ At all events, there are two hundred pieces,
+ Which will be most convenient, should my husband
+ Be to a trial brought--So chance direct! [She goes off.]
+
+
+
+
+ACT V.
+
+
+
+ SCENE I.
+
+ An office in Mr. ANDREWS's house, and a CLERK sitting therein.
+
+ Enter JEFFERSON in a cloak.
+
+ JEFFERSON. Be not surpriz'd; it is an old acquaintance.
+ Have a few moments absence so estrang'd you?
+
+ CLERK. O Jefferson! those moments have occasion'd
+ Many and various rumours of your fortune;
+ Wherefore, permit me to rejoice to see you
+ But whence this sudden ghastliness of visage
+ The hue of death itself!
+
+ JEFFERSON. It matters not.
+ You never more may from this moment see me:--
+ But this is foreign to me, present business.
+ There are some matters of most deep concern
+ Which I must straight impart to our good master;
+ For which, this night I fought him at his villa,
+ (Whither I heard he had resorted early)
+ But much to my surprize, he was not there.
+ I pray inform me, where I now may find him.
+
+ CLERK. What shall I do? I am enjoin'd to secrecy.
+ Are you full sure they're of such high concern
+ As may excuse me in such breach of confidence?
+
+ JEFFERSON. I should not else have urg'd it to you thus.
+
+ CLERK. Try the new tavern in th' adjacent alley.
+ (There, melancholy man, he waits my coming,
+ At an approaching hour) [Aside.] But, Jefferson,
+ Should you disclose who pointed out your course,
+ I may for ever forfeit his regard.
+
+ JEFFERSON. Rest well assur'd, no motive should compel it,
+ And blessings wait upon thee for this kindness!
+
+ CLERK. [To JEFFERSON as he goes off.] Yet hold awhile; I nearly
+ had forgot.
+ This night, the gentle Lucia fought you here,
+ But disappointed, left you this remembrance.
+ 'Tis for five hundred pounds.
+
+ JEFFERSON. Too gen'rous maid!
+ O! had my truant, and ungrateful heart
+ Her merit justly priz'd, I might this day,
+ In honour, as in virtue have been happy,
+ Not thus a wretched outcast of the world--
+ I pray return it with a thousand blessings--
+ Heart-rending kindness!--Oh!--again farewell! [He goes off.]
+
+ CLERK. His countenance betray'd some desp'rate fortune.
+
+ Enter MARIA.
+
+ MARIA. Was not that Jefferson?
+
+ CLERK. 'Twas he indeed!
+
+ MARIA. Undone!--undone for ever!--My poor husband!-- [Aside]
+ I spoke to him, but he declin'd an answer,
+ And rush'd into the street.
+
+ CLERK. Unhappy youth!
+ He told me I should ne'er behold him more.
+
+ MARIA. Again I am at ease--[Aside.] But if for certain
+ He hath our master plunder'd, as 'tis rumour'd,
+ Should he not be secured?
+
+ CLERK. His errand hither,
+ Was to have seen our master.
+
+ MARIA. Undone again! [Aside as she goes off.]
+
+ CLERK. She seems not less disturb'd than him she fought.
+ 'Tis fit I follow her, and seek her meanings,
+ Which from her scatter'd words I could not gather.
+ Besides, she mutter'd strangely to herself.
+ Some sad disasters are I fear approaching,
+ Whilst every countenance betrays distress. [He goes off.]
+
+
+
+ SCENE II.
+
+ A room in a tavern.
+
+ ANDREWS and JEFFERSON together, the first walking to and fro
+ in much agitation.
+
+ ANDREWS. And is this surely so? my blood runs chill.
+ Oh! tell me, how, or when I've been thine enemy,
+ That thou could'st calmly mean me all this mischief.
+ I cannot credit it.
+
+ JEFFERSON. 'Tis, 'tis too true-- [Weeps.]
+
+ ANDREWS. I once thought Jefferson the child of virtue.
+
+ JEFFERSON. To fix me such, your lessons were not wanting.
+ But oh! when we indulge one vicious passion,
+ A train of others unforeseen will follow,
+ Until at length all virtue is extinguish'd.
+
+ ANDREWS. What's to be done! distress crowds on distress------
+ Inhuman! barbarous! most abandon'd woman!
+ And thou curs'd instrument!--Yet hold, my heart!--
+ I see contrition in his mournful eye,
+ And feel soft pity throbbing in my bosom:
+ Deluded youth!--no object for revenge-- [Aside]
+
+ JEFFERSON. I am indeed accurs'd; I have betray'd
+ The most indulgent master, best of friends!
+ But you will shortly have sufficient vengeance.
+ A dose I this night drank will rid me speedily
+ Of that sad life I can endure no longer.
+
+ ANDREWS. Oh! 'twas a desp'rate act!--Could'st thou conceive,
+ A crime, to the Almighty so offensive,
+ Would for thy other failings make atonement;
+ May there not yet be help?
+
+ JEFFERSON. 'Tis now too late,
+ The deadly drug, works far, and I grow faint--
+
+ ANDREWS. 'Twere better to have liv'd whole years in penitence,
+ Or wild despair, to expiate your guilt.
+
+ JEFFERSON. Oh! cou'd I hope for your assisting prayers,
+ 'Twou'd be some comfort to my fainting soul.
+ You are so good, you cannot but have interest
+ In those blest dwellings, whence my foul offences
+ May have excluded me, alas, for ever!
+ Nor dare I lift or eye or hand for mercy.
+
+ ANDREWS. Sad-fated youth! my own distracted state
+ Is suited ill to intercourse with heaven.
+ But lose no time yourself: that righteous judge,
+ Whom you have so repeatedly offended,
+ Abounds in mercy, as he doth in justice;
+ And pray'r is at his throne a pow'rful advocate.
+
+ JEFFERSON. And you, as sure as that Great Pow'r is just,
+ Will meet the due reward of all your virtues.
+ When I go hence, I pray you read this paper--
+ My fate draws near---so now, farewel for ever! [He goes off.]
+
+ ANDREWS. What horrid images crowd on my soul!
+ Yet worse may follow--blood perchance and murder--
+ But will not injur'd honour,--ruin'd peace,
+ For ever ruin'd, justify revenge!-- [Pauses.]
+ I am resolv'd--So for this writing now-- [He opens it and reads.]
+
+ "Most injured Sir,
+ Inclos'd you have my will by which, as some small recompense
+ for the many wrongs I have done you, I have bequeathed you
+ all the little fortune I have left. Oh! lend your prayers,
+ and pity a repentant wretched sinner.
+ William Jefferson."
+
+ Some recompense!--There can be none for me.
+ The moment is at hand, the fearful moment,
+ When I'm to seek for that, which, when discover'd,
+ My sure perdition seals--yet even certainty
+ Were ease to that I feel--tremendous state!
+ Like some benighted traveller quite 'wilder'd,
+ I see no friendly ray to guide my steps--
+ But 'midst my woes, I've let this hapless youth,
+ Plung'd in despair, escape me unattended.
+ I'll haste to seek him out--Yet, cannot now:
+ Troubles more intimate claim ev'ry thought.
+
+ Enter one of his CLERKS.
+
+ I near despair'd of seeing you: 'tis almost light.
+ What has delay'd you so?
+
+ CLERK. It was your wife.
+
+ ANDREWS. My wife!
+
+ CLERK. Yes, sir, she's but at home some moments.
+
+ ANDREWS. Was she attended?
+
+ CLERK. One went in before her.
+
+ ANDREWS. What, into my house?
+
+ CLERK. Yes, sir.
+
+ ANDREWS. Man, or woman?
+
+ CLERK. A man, sir.
+
+ ANDREWS. Hah!--And know you who he is?
+
+ CLERK. Lord Belmour, sir.
+
+ ANDREWS. Are you sure?
+
+ CLERK. As I exist--
+ For waiting, as 'twas your desire I should,
+ 'Till I could warn you of your wife's return,
+ And walking 'twixt the dwelling and the warehouse,
+ I by a light, which glimmer'd from the moon,
+ Then almost waned, descry'd a man and woman
+ Close standing at the wicket of the gate,
+ That leads into the lane. I stood conceal'd,
+ Until lord Belmour and Maria pass'd me
+ Towards the house.
+
+ ANDREWS. Can I now pass that way?
+
+ CLERK. You may; I lock'd the doors, and have the keys.
+
+ ANDREWS. Come, deep and sweet revenge! 'twere virtue here. [Aside]
+ It must be near the dawn. Go on, I'll follow.
+ Life's now a curse; death then my only wish.
+
+
+
+ SCENE III.
+
+ Mr. ANDREWS's house.
+
+ THOMAS and MARIA.
+
+ MARIA. Who releas'd you?
+
+ THOMAS. Our unhappy master.
+
+ MARIA. Is he in town, and up at this late hour?
+
+ THOMAS. He's in the house; and heaven grant, Maria,
+ He holds his reason: for he rush'd impetuous,
+ With looks as madness wild, into the room,
+ Where I sat tied; when falling on his knees,
+ He crav'd my pardon; then, from my bruis'd arms
+ He cut the cords, and hastily ran off.
+
+ MARIA. Which way?
+
+ THOMAS. Towards the compting-house.
+
+ MARIA. O heav'n!
+
+ THOMAS. Why this alarm?
+
+ MARIA. His arms are there.
+
+ THOMAS. 'Tis true,
+ And never man appear'd more desperate.
+ Wherefore, as ev'n a moment's loss were dangerous;
+ I'll for his neighbours speed, Wilson and Goodwin. [He goes off.]
+
+ MARIA. The mischief is at hand, and 'twill require
+ My deepest skill, or I'm undone for ever.
+ But to the last I will assert my innocence. [A bell rings.]
+ This is my mistress, and from her bedchamber. [Rings again.]
+ Again it rings; and with unusual violence.--
+ I must away--What fights may meet me now!-- [She goes off.]
+
+
+
+ SCENE IV.
+
+ Another apartment.
+
+ CONSTANTIA and LUCIA.
+
+ CONSTANTIA. Oh! Lucia, Lucia, I shall die with terrours--
+ What can these noises mean? [A groan is heard.] Heard you
+ that groan?
+
+ LUCIA. Sure life expir'd with it!--A woman's voice--
+
+ Enter hastily WILSON and GOODWIN, THOMAS and other Servants,
+ at which CONSTANTIA and LUCIA shriek.
+
+ CONSTANTIA. Protect us, heaven!--what are you?
+
+ WILSON. A messenger,
+ In utmost hurry rous'd us from our beds,
+ And pray'd us to haste hither with all speed,
+ To save a family.
+
+ CONSTANTIA. Oh sirs!--heav'n grant
+ 'Tis not too late--some sad event, I dread-- [A groan, and
+ then another]
+ They're from the room where Mrs. Andrews sleeps. [CONSTANTIA
+ swoons, and is taken of with LUCIA.]
+
+ Enter MARIA.
+
+ MARIA. Woe! woe unutterable!--fights of horrour!
+ All welt'ring in their gore--haste! haste with me. [They go off.]
+
+ [Back Scene opens and discovers Mrs. ANDREWS's bedchamber--
+ Lord BELMOUR on the ground with his sword in his hand bloody,
+ and Mr. ANDREWS with his also drawn and bloody, in a fix'd
+ posture, resting on it, and looking on the ground.]
+
+ GOODWIN. O heav'n! what havock's here! [To ANDREWS] Alas!
+ my friend,
+ What have you done?
+
+ WILSON. He's quite insensible.
+ Perhaps this woman can inform us--speak--
+
+ MARIA. I will, I will. Hearing the bell twice rung
+ With violence unusual from the chamber
+ In which my mistress lay, I thither flew;
+ Where entering, with amazement I beheld
+ Lord Belmour there, and her upon her knees:
+ Sudden, my master, with an unsheath'd sword
+ In rage rush'd in, and instantly assail'd him,
+ (Who also had drawn his) they fought awhile;
+ When with a hideous groan lord Belmour reel'd,
+ Bit quick recovering, with doubled fury
+ At his assailant made--when, she, quite wild,
+ Rush'd on lord Belmour's sword, and fell with him.
+
+ WILSON. 'Tis better done by him, than by our friend.
+
+ ANDREWS. Done--What done? all is not done as yet--this--
+
+ [He is going to stab himself, GOODWIN and WILSON rush on him,
+ and wrest his sword from him.]
+
+ GOODWIN. What would your madness do? too much already,
+ This fatal scene exhibits to our view.
+
+ ANDREWS. Deaf, deaf to all,--away,--away with counsel!--
+ 'Tis clear as noonday light--burst--burst, my brain!--
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. Listen--oh listen to a dying criminal--
+ Your wife is innocent--I, I alone--
+
+ ANDREWS. Peace, villain, peace!--how came you in her chamber?
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. Without her knowledge--Oh! 'twas by that woman,
+ [Pointing to MARIA]
+ My vile accomplice in the soul attempt.
+
+ MARIA. Mercy! O mercy! and I'll tell the whole.
+ Oh! she is innocent--I, all to blame--
+
+ WILSON. 'Tis fit a magistrate be sent for instantly;
+ As also meet assistance to these wounded,
+ Who seem to need it much. [A servant goes off.]
+
+ Lord BELMOUR. Good sirs!
+ Let me be hence convey'd--I can't escape--
+ And heav'n will in some moments give full justice. [He is led out.]
+
+ ANDREWS. And let me also fly these scenes of horrour,
+ Or I shall wilder be than the chain'd wretch
+ That beats the dungeon walls.
+
+ [As he is passing by Mrs. ANDREWS, she seizes the skirt of his coat.]
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Oh sir!--my husband!--
+
+ ANDREWS. Take! take the vile adultress from my sight.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. For charity, forbear those bitter words.
+ True, I have injur'd you beyond all hopes
+ Either of your indulgence, or heav'n's mercy.
+ But by that Pow'r! before whose just tribunal,
+ I shortly shall be summon'd to appear,
+ My soul abhors the base imputed guilt,
+ (How strong soe'er appearance speak against me)
+ Ev'n in thought.
+
+ ANDREWS. Abandon'd, faithless woman!
+ Oh! that her foul disgrace clos'd with her eyes!
+ Then might I undisturb'd behold this havock. [Aside]
+ Did not I, find you on your knees to him?
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. I was beseeching him to leave the room.
+
+ ANDREWS. How came he there?
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. By the same Pow'r supreme!
+ You're not yourself of that event more ignorant.
+ Soon as my woman for the night had left me,
+ He from the closet rush'd into my chamber.
+
+ ANDREWS. Oh! I have been too hasty--much too rash.------
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. You will not think so, when you hear the whole.
+ The wretched nobleman, you now have punish'd,
+ Is not less guilty than if I had yielded.
+ Yet, think not that I mean t' acquit myself;
+ My conduct led him to the vile attempt:
+ And, oh! with rage and thirst of vengeance fir'd,
+ I was too busy in th' infernal plot,
+ Contain'd in that false letter to your friend,
+ The honest, gen'rous, and most faithful Wilson.
+ I also had your old and trusty steward
+ Accus'd of crimes to which he was a stranger;
+ And Jefferson to me owes his perdition.
+
+ ANDREWS. Cease! cease! pour self-convicting mourner, cease!--
+ This cannot be--'tis the sick fancy's dream.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Oh! that it were untrue, as thou art kind.
+ Yes; this, all this, and more I have committed.
+ I have undone thee--I, thy bosom's favourite,--
+ And am the fatal source of all these horrors.
+ But my swift hast'ning fate will be some recompence.--
+ I bleed within apace, and grow most faint------
+ How happy was I once, and how ungrateful!
+
+ ANDREWS. 'Tis, 'tis too much--
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Alas! I see it is.--
+ How these reflections rack my madding brain!--
+ Turn, Oh! turn that tender aspect from me!
+ 'Tis worse than scorpion rods, or whips of steel.
+ Abhor me; scorn me; tear me from thy fondness,
+ And every imprecation pour upon me:
+ For hope is fled, and I would court despair.
+ Some suff'rings here might lessen those hereafter,
+ I would not covet else a moment's life.--
+
+ ANDREWS. Would I could sooth her tortur'd soul to rest!
+ Her sorrows rend my heart.--Oh thou sweet penitent!
+ There's not an angel in the heav'nly mansions,
+ That will not sue for thee.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Yet, there is something
+ I would petition as my last request--
+ Let me conjure thee then, most injur'd excellence!
+ By all the happy hours we liv'd together,
+ Ere one infernal passion seiz'd my heart!
+ Have pity on the harmless, dear-lov'd innocents,
+ Whom I must leave amidst a cruel world!
+ And when you shall my rueful story tell,
+ Be thus far kind, and say, as is the truth,
+ Oh! say, she was not an adultress.
+
+ ANDREWS. I will, I'll speak thee as my soul conceives thee,
+ Spotless, and free as Virtue's self from blemish.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Then, may with me, thy sorrows have an end!--
+
+ ANDREWS. Oh! canst thou then forgive my wild upbraiding?
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. I blame thee not--so let me be convey'd
+ From thy dread presence, and this fatal spot:
+ They are too much for weakness to endure.
+
+ ANDREWS. No, no, I'll watch thee whilst a single spark
+ Of that lov'd life remains, and sooth thy woes.
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. Too kind!--Forbear!--Were your fond wish indulg'd,
+ It would but add new weight to your afflictions.
+ Oh! agonizing thoughts!--Oh! my pour soul!--
+
+ ANDREWS. She droops; she dies--and oh! by saving me--
+ Physicians, surgeons, ev'ry help be sent for!--
+
+ Mrs. ANDREWS. 'Twere fruitless all unless their friendly aid
+ Some balm could minister to deep despair--
+ Rage on, distress---haste, madness! quench my soul--
+ Hark! hark! that voice!------the door of mercy's clos'd--
+
+ ANDREWS. [To the attendants.] Straightaway, convey her hence
+ to mine own chamber.
+
+ [She is carried off, and as he is following her,
+ several bailiffs enter rudely with CONSTANTIA.]
+
+ CONSTANTIA. Protect my father, heav'n! undone--undone--
+
+ WILSON. What can these ruffians mean? whom do you seek?
+
+ Bailiff. He is our prisoner on several writs. [Pointing
+ to Mr. ANDREWS]
+
+ ANDREWS. Ay, ay, come on--'Tis fit I shou'd be punish'd.
+ Take, drag me hence, ye ministers of justice!
+ Death, death, or madness only can relieve me.
+
+ GOODWIN. What is the whole demand?
+
+ Bailiff. Above four thousand?
+
+ WILSON. He shall not sink for that: I'll be his pledge.
+
+ ANDREWS. Most gen'rous, injur'd friend, this is too much.
+
+ GOODWIN. [To WILSON.] I'll join you in the bonds.--Prepare them,
+ sirs. [To the bailiffs, who go off]
+
+ CONSTANTIA. Thanks, best of friends! but you shall never suffer.
+ My fortune, independent of my father,
+ Far more than this for which you have engag'd,
+ Shall be our pledg'd security.
+
+ ANDREWS. Daggers!------daggers!
+ Wasted--all wasted, in the general wreck. [Aside]
+
+ WILSON. 'Tis fit lord Weston should be straight appriz'd
+ Of the sad fate of his unhappy uncle;
+ These two nights past, since his return to town,
+ He hath repos'd with me.
+
+ GOODWIN. I hear his voice.
+
+ Enter lord WESTON hastily.
+
+ Lord WESTON. Where, where's my father! take, O take your son!
+ And let me fly as such into your arms!
+ Just hearing of your undeserv'd calamities,
+ From your remorseless creditors below,
+ I have engag'd for all their claim'd demands,
+ And come to wipe the tear from ev'ry eye.
+
+ ANDREWS. Cold sweats bedew my feeble, trembling limbs,
+ And ev'ry object round me grows a blank.
+ Good heav'n! support me, to these tasks unequal------[As he is
+ falling, WILSON and THOMAS support him.]
+
+ WILSON. The feelings of his heart o'erpow'r him so,
+ He cannot give them vent; it may prove fatal------
+ He's all convuls'd: let's place him on this seat. [CONSTANTIA
+ attends him.]
+
+ Lord WESTON. [He moves towards CONSTANTIA.]
+ My angel--My Constantia! O those tears!
+ And looks of desperation pierce my soul.
+ Your father lives--Fortune again may favour:
+ But I am your's, and will be so for ever.
+
+ WILSON. O my good lord!
+ There are disasters yet within these walls,
+ More fatal far, which claim our instant aid.
+
+ Lord WESTON. I've heard them all--my uncle is no more--
+ Would that he had not fall'n in such a cause!
+
+ WILSON. But heav'n hath will'd it, and we must submit.
+ With smiles delusive, other crimes decoy,
+ To hazard future ills for present joy:
+ Gaming alone no transient rapture knows,
+ No gleam of pleasure for eternal woes;
+ Distrust and anxious fears its birth attend;
+ And wild distraction waits its guilty end.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Female Gamester, by Gorges Edmond Howard
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