Imagens das páginas
PDF
ePub

viour in her mistress; nor could she forbear very eagerly begging to know the cause of this passion. Sophia made her no answer for some time, and then starting suddenly up, caught her maid by the hand, and cried, 'O Honour! 'I am undone.'-' Marry forbid,' cries Honour: 'I wish 'the letter had been burnt before I had brought it to your 'la'ship. I'm sure I thought it would have comforted your la'ship, or I would have seen it at the devil before 'I would have touched it.'-' Honour,' says Sophia, 'you ' are a good girl, and it is vain to attempt concealing longer my weakness from you; I have thrown away my 'heart on a man who hath forsaken me.'-' And is Mr. Jones,' answered the maid, 'such a perfidy man?'— 'He hath taken his leave of me,' says Sophia, 'for ever ' in that letter. Nay, he hath desired me to forget him. 'Could he have desired that, if he had loved me? 'Could he have borne such a thought? Could he have written such a word?'-'No certainly, Ma'am,' cries Honour; and to be sure, if the best man in Eng'land was to desire me to forget him, I'd take him at his 'word. Marry come up! I am sure your la'ship hath 'done him too much honour ever to think on him. A young lady who may take her choice of all the young men in the country. And to be sure, if I may be so presumptuous as to offer my poor opinion, there is เ young Mr. Blifil, who, besides that he is come of honest parents, and will be one of the greatest squires all hereabouts, he is to be sure, in my poor opinion, a more 'handsomer and a more politer man by half; and besides, he is a young gentleman of a sober character, and who may defy any of the neighbours to say black is his eye; 'he follows no dirty trollops, nor can any bastards be laid 'at his door. Forget him, indeed! I thank heaven I my'self am not so much at my last prayers, as to suffer any 'man to bid me forget him twice. If the best he that

[ocr errors]
[ocr errors]

[ocr errors]

เ wears a head was for to go for to offer to say such an 'affronting word to me, I would never give him my comเ pany afterwards, if there was another young man in the 'kingdom. And as I was saying, to be sure, there is young Mr. Blifil.'-' Name not his detested name,' cries Sophia. Nay, Ma'am,' says Honour, 'if your la'ship 'doth not like him, there be more jolly handsome young men that would court your la'ship, if they had but the 'least encouragement. I don't believe there is arrow young gentleman in this country, or in the next to it, 'that if your la'ship was but to look, as if you had a 'mind to him, would not come about to make his offers เ directly.' What a wretch dost thou imagine me,' cries Sophia, 'by affronting my ears with such stuff! I detest 'all mankind.'-Nay, to be sure, Ma'am,' answered Honour, 'your la'ship hath had enough to give you a 'surfeit of them. To be used ill by such a poor beggarly bastardly fellow.'-' Hold your blasphemous tongue,' cries Sophia; 'how dare you mention his name with disrespect before me? He use me ill! No, his poor bleeding heart suffered more when he writ the cruel words, than mine from reading them. O! he is all heroic virtue, and angelic goodness. I am ashamed of the 'weakness of my own passion, for blaming what I ought to admire. O, Honour! it is my good only which he 'consults. To my interest he sacrifices both himself and The apprehension of ruining me hath driven him 'to despair.'-'I am very glad,' says Honour, 'to hear your la'ship take that into your consideration; for to be เ sure, it must be nothing less than ruin, to give your mind to one that is turned out of doors, and is not 'worth a farthing in the world.'-'Turned out of doors!' cries Sophia hastily: 'how! what dost thou mean?'Why, to be sure, Ma'am, my master no sooner told Squire Allworthy about Mr. Jones having offered to

me.

ke love to your la'ship, than the squire stripped him rk naked, and turned him out of doors!'-Ha!' Sophia, 'I have been the cursed, wretched cause of 3 destruction! Turned naked out of doors! Here, onour, take all the money I have; take the rings from y fingers. Here, my watch: carry him all. Go find m immediately.'-' For heaven's sake, Ma'am,' anred Mrs. Honour, 'do but consider, if my master ould miss any of these things, I should be made to swer for them. Therefore let me beg your la'ship ɔt to part with your watch and jewels. Besides, the oney, I think, is enough of all conscience; and as for at, master can never know any thing of the matter.'ere then,' cries Sophia, 'take every farthing I am orth, find him out immediately, and give it him. Go, o, lose not a moment.'

Mrs. Honour departed according to orders, and finding Black George below stairs, delivered him the purse, which contained sixteen guineas, being indeed the whole stock of Sophia; for though her father was very liberal to her, she was much too generous to be rich.

Black George having received the purse, set forward towards the alehouse; but in the way a thought occurred to him, whether he should not detain this money likewise. His conscience however immediately started at this suggestion, and began to upbraid him with ingratitude to his benefactor. To this his avarice answered, That his conscience should have considered the matter before, when he deprived poor Jones of his 500l. That having quietly acquiesced in what was of so much greater importance, it was absurd, if not downright hypocrisy, to affect any qualms at this trifle. In return to which, Conscience, like a good lawyer, attempted to distinguish between an absolute breach of trust, as here where the goods were delivered, and a bare concealment of what

was found, as in the former case. Avarice presently treated this with ridicule, called it a distinction without a difference, and absolutely insisted, that when once all pretensions of honour and virtue were given up in any one instance, that there was no precedent for resorting to them upon a second occasion. In short, poor Conscience had certainly been defeated in the argument, had not Fear stept in to her assistance, and very strenuously urged, that the real distinction between the two actions, did not lie in the different degrees of honour, but of safety; for that the secreting the 500l. was a matter of very little hazard; whereas the detaining the sixteen guineas was liable to the utmost danger of discovery.

By this friendly aid of Fear, Conscience obtained a complete victory in the mind of Black George, and, after making him a few compliments on his honesty, forced him to deliver the money to Jones.

CHAPTER XIV.

A short chapter containing a short dialogue between Squire Western and his sister.

[ocr errors]

MRS. WESTERN had been engaged abroad all that day. The squire met her at her return home; and when she enquired after Sophia, he acquainted her that he had secured her safe enough. She is locked up in chamber,' cries he, and Honour keeps the key.' As his looks were full of prodigious wisdom and sagacity when he gave his sister this information, it is probable he expected much applause from her for what he had done; but how was he disappointed, when, with a most disdainful aspect, she cried, 'Sure, brother, you are the weakest of all men.

[ocr errors]

'make love to your la'ship, than the squire stripped him 'stark naked, and turned him out of doors!'-' Ha!' says Sophia, 'I have been the cursed, wretched cause of 'his destruction! Turned naked out of doors! Here, Honour, take all the money I have; take the rings from my fingers. Here, my watch: carry him all. Go find 'him immediately.'-' For heaven's sake, Ma'am,' answered Mrs. Honour, 'do but consider, if my master 'should miss any of these things, I should be made to เ answer for them. Therefore let me beg your la'ship เ not to part with your watch and jewels. Besides, the money, I think, is enough of all conscience; and as for เ that, master can never know any thing of the matter.''Here then,' cries Sophia, 'take every farthing I am เ worth, find him out immediately, and give it him. Go, เ go, lose not a moment.'

Mrs. Honour departed according to orders, and finding Black George below stairs, delivered him the purse, which contained sixteen guineas, being indeed the whole stock of Sophia; for though her father was very liberal to her, she was much too generous to be rich.

Black George having received the purse, set forward towards the alehouse; but in the way a thought occurred to him, whether he should not detain this money likewise. His conscience however immediately started at this suggestion, and began to upbraid him with ingratitude to his benefactor. To this his avarice answered, That his conscience should have considered the matter before, when he deprived poor Jones of his 500l. That having quietly acquiesced in what was of so much greater importance, it was absurd, if not downright hypocrisy, to affect any qualms at this trifle. In return to which, Conscience, like a good lawyer, attempted to distinguish between an absolute breach of trust, as here where the goods were delivered, and a bare concealment of what

« AnteriorContinuar »