<h2><SPAN name="chap54"></SPAN>CHAPTER LIV</h2>
<p class="letter">
Day breaking, I have the Pleasure of viewing the Person of Miss Snapper, whom I
had not seen before—the Soldier is witty upon me—is
offended—talks much of his Valour—is reprimanded by a grave
Gentlewoman—we are alarmed by the cry of Highwaymen—I get out of
the Coach, and stand in my own defence—they ride off without having
attacked us—I pursue them—one of them is thrown from his Horse and
taken—I return to the Coach—am complimented by Miss
Snapper—the Captain’s Behaviour on this Occasion—the Prude
reproaches me in a Soliloquy—I upbraid her in the same Manner—the
Behaviour of Miss Snapper, at Breakfast, disobliges me—the Lawyer is
witty upon the Officer, who threatens him</p>
<p>In the meantime, the day breaking in upon us, discovered to one another the
faces of their fellow travellers: and I had the good fortune to find my
mistress not quite so deformed nor disagreeable as she had been represented to
me. Her head, indeed, bore some resemblance to a hatchet, the edge being
represented by her face; but she had a certain delicacy in her complexion, and
a great deal of vivacity in her eyes, which were very large and black; and,
though the protuberance of her breast, when considered alone, seemed to drag
her forwards, it was easy to perceive an equivalent on her back which balanced
the other, and kept her body in equilibrio. On the whole, I thought I should
have great reason to congratulate myself if it should be my fate to possess
twenty thousand pounds encumbered with such a wife. I began therefore to
deliberate about the most probable means of acquiring the conquest, and was so
much engrossed by this idea, that I scarce took any notice of the rest of the
people in the coach, but revolved my project in silence; while the conversation
was maintained as before by the object of my hopes, the son of Mars, and the
barrister, who by this time recollected himself, and talked in terms as much as
ever. At length a dispute happened, which ended in a wager, to be determined by
me, who was so much absorbed in contemplation, that I neither heard the
reference nor the question which was put to me by each in his turn. Affronted
at my supposed contempt, the soldier with great vociferation swore I was either
dumb or deaf if not both, and that I looked as if I could not say Bo to a
goose. Aroused at this observation, I fixed my eyes upon him, and pronounced
with emphasis the interjection Bo! Upon which he cocked his hat in a fierce
manner, and cried, “D—me sir, what d’ye mean by that.”
Had I intended to answer him, which by the by was not my design, I should have
been anticipated by Miss, who told him, my meaning was to show, that I could
cry Bo to a goose; and laughed very heartily at my laconic reproof. Her
explanation and mirth did not help to appease his wrath, which broke out in
several martial insinuations, such as—“I do not understand such
freedoms, d—me! D—n my blood! I’m a gentleman, and bear the
king’s commission. ’Sblood! some people deserve to have their noses
pulled for their impertinence.” I thought to have checked these
ejaculations by a frown; because he had talked so much of his valour that I had
long ago rated him as an ass in a lion’s skin; but this expedient did not
answer my expectation, he took umbrage at the contraction of my brow, swore he
did not value my sulky looks a fig’s end, and protested he feared no man
breathing. Miss Snapper said, she was very glad to find herself in company with
a man of so much courage, who, she did not doubt, would protect her from all
the attempts of highwaymen during our journey. “Make yourself perfectly
easy on that head, madam,” replied the officer. “I have got a pair
of pistols (here they are), which I took from a horse officer at the battle of
Dettingen; they are double loaded, and if any highwayman in England robs you of
the value of a pin while I have the honour of being in your company, d—n
my heart.” When he had expressed himself in this manner, a prim
gentlewoman, who had sat silent hitherto, opened her mouth, and said, she
wondered how any man could be so rude as to pull out such weapons before
ladies. “D—me, madam,” cried the champion, “if you are
so much afraid at the sight of a pistol, how d’ye propose to stand fire
if there should be occasion?” She then told him that, if she thought he
could be so unmannerly as to use fire-arms in her presence, whatever might be
the occasion, she would get out of the coach immediately, and walk to the next
village, where she might procure a convenience to herself. Before he could make
any answer, my Dulcinea interposed, and observed that, far from being offended
at a gentleman’s using his arms in his own defence, she thought herself
very lucky in being along with one by whose valour she stood a good chance of
saving herself from being rifled. The prude cast a disdainful look at Miss, and
said that people, who have but little to lose, are sometimes the most
solicitous about preserving it. The old lady was affronted at this inuendo, and
took notice, that people ought to be very well informed before they speak
slightingly of other people’s fortune, lest they discover their own envy,
and make themselves ridiculous. The daughter declared, that she did not pretend
to vie with anybody in point of riches; and if the lady, who insisted upon
non-resistance, would promise to indemnify us all for the loss we should
sustain, she would be one of the first to persuade the captain to submission,
in case we should be attacked. To this proposal, reasonable as it was, the
reserved lady made no other reply than a scornful glance and a toss of her
head. I was very well pleased with the spirit of my young mistress, and even
wished for an opportunity of distinguishing my courage under her eye, which I
believed could not fail of prepossessing her in my favour, when all of a sudden
Strap rode up to the coach door, and told us in a great fright, that two men on
horseback were crossing the heath (for by this time we had passed Hounslow),
and made directly towards us.</p>
<p>This piece of information was no sooner delivered, than Mrs. Snapper began to
scream, her daughter grew pale, the old lady pulled out her purse to be in
readiness, the lawyer’s teeth chattered, while he pronounced,
“’Tis no matter—we’ll sue the county and
recover.” The captain gave evident signs of confusion: and I, after
having commanded the coachman to stop, opened the door, jumped out, and invited
the warrior to follow me. But, finding him backward and astonished, I took his
pistols, and, giving them to Strap, who had by this time alighted and trembled
very much, I mounted on horseback; and, taking my own (which I could better
depend upon) from the holsters, cocked them both, and faced the robbers, who
were now very near us. Seeing me ready to oppose them on horseback, and another
man armed a-foot, they made a halt at some distance to reconnoitre us: and
after having rode round us twice, myself still facing about as they rode, went
off the same way they came, at a hand gallop. A gentleman’s servant
coming up with a horse at the same time, I offered him a crown to assist me in
pursuing them, which he no sooner accepted, than I armed him with the
officer’s pistols, and we galloped after the thieves, who, trusting to
the swiftness of their horses, stopped till we came within shot of them and
then, firing at us, put their nags to the full speed. We followed them as fast
as our beasts could carry us; but, not being so well mounted as they, our
efforts would have been to little purpose, had not the horse of one of them
stumbled, and thrown his rider with such violence over his head, that he lay
senseless when we came up, and was taken without the least opposition; while
his comrade consulted his own safety in flight, without regarding the distress
of his friend. We scarce had time to make ourselves masters of his arms, and
tie his hands together, before he recovered his senses, when, learning his
situation he affected surprise, demanded to know by what authority we used a
gentleman in that manner, and had the impudence to threaten us with a
prosecution for robbery. In the meantime, we perceived Strap coming up with a
crowd of people, armed up with different kinds of weapons; and among the rest a
farmer, who no sooner perceived the thief, whom we had secured, than he cried
with great emotion, “There’s the fellow who robbed me an hour ago
of twenty pounds, in a canvas bag.” He was immediately searched, and the
money found exactly as it had been described; upon which we committed him to
the charge of the countryman, who carried him to the town of Hounslow, which,
it seems, the farmer had alarmed; and I, having satisfied the footman for his
trouble, according to promise, returned with Strap to the coach, where I found
the captain and lawyer busy in administering smelling bottles and cordials to
the grave lady, who had gone into a fit at the noise of firing.</p>
<p>When I had taken my seat, Miss Snapper, who from the coach had seen everything
that happened; made me a compliment on my behaviour, and said she was glad to
see me returned without having received any injury; her mother too owned
herself obliged to my resolution: the lawyer told me, that I was entitled by
act of parliament to a reward of forty pounds, for having apprehended a
highwayman. The soldier observed, with a countenance in which impudence and
shame struggling, produced some disorder, that if I had not been in such a
d—d hurry to get out of the coach, he would have secured the rogues
effectually, without all this bustle and loss of time, by a scheme, which my
heat and precipitation ruined. “For my own part,” continued he,
“I am always extremely cool on these occasions.” “So it
appeared, by your trembling,” said the young lady. “Death and
d—ion!” cried he, “your sex protects you, madam; if any man
on earth durst tell me so much, I’d send him to hell, d—n my heart!
in an instant.” So saying, he fixed his eyes upon me, and asked if I had
seen him tremble? I answered without hesitation, “Yes.”
“D—me, sir!” said he, “d’ye doubt my
courage?” I replied, “Very much.” This declaration quite
disconcerted him. He looked blank, and pronounced with a faltering voice,
“Oh! it’s very well: d—n my blood! I shall find a
time.” I signified my contempt of him, by thrusting my tongue in my
cheek, which humbled him so much, that he scarce swore another oath aloud
during the whole journey.</p>
<p>The precise lady, having recruited her spirits by the help of some strong
waters, began a soliloquy, in which she wondered that any man, who pretended to
maintain the character of a gentleman, could, for the sake of a little paltry
coin, throw persons of honour into such quandaries as might endanger their
lives; and professed her surprise that women were not ashamed to commend such
brutality. At the same time vowing that for the future she would never set foot
in a stage coach, if a private convenience could be had for love or money.</p>
<p>Nettled at her remarks, I took the same method of conveying my sentiments, and
wondered in my turn, that any woman of common sense should be so unreasonable
as to expect that people, who had neither acquaintance nor connection with her,
would tamely allow themselves to be robbed and maltreated, merely to indulge
her capricious humour. I likewise confessed my astonishment at her insolence
and ingratitude in taxing a person with brutality, who deserved her approbation
and acknowledgment; and vowed that, if ever she should be assaulted again, I
would leave her to the mercy of the spoiler, that she might know the value of
my protection.</p>
<p>This person of honour did not think fit to carry on the altercation any
further, but seemed to chew the cud of her resentment with the crestfallen
captain, while I entered into discourse with my charmer, who was the more
pleased with my conversation, as she had conceived a very indifferent opinion
of my intellects from my former silence. I should have had cause to be equally
satisfied with the sprightliness of her genius, could she have curbed her
imagination with judgment; but she laboured under such a profusion of talk,
that I dreaded her unruly tongue, and felt by anticipation the horrors of an
eternal clack! However, when I considered, on the other hand, the joys
attending the possession of twenty thousand pounds, I forgot her imperfections,
seized occasion by the forelock, and tried to insinuate myself into her
affection. The careful mother kept a strict watch over her and though she could
not help behaving civilly to me, took frequent opportunities of discouraging
our communication, by reprimanding her for being so free with strangers, and
telling her she must learn to speak less and think more. Abridged of the use of
speech, we conversed with our eyes, and I found the young lady very eloquent in
this kind of discourse. In short, I had reason to believe that she was sick of
the old gentlewoman’s tuition, and that I should find it no difficult
matter to supersede her authority.</p>
<p>When we arrived at the place where we were to breakfast, I alighted, and helped
my mistress out of the coach, as well as her mother who called for a private
room to which they withdrew in order to eat by themselves. As they retired
together, I perceived that Miss had got more twists from nature than I had
before observed for she was bent sideways into the figure of an S, so that her
progression very much resembled that of a crab. The prude also chose the
captain for her messmate, and ordered breakfast for two only, to be brought
into another separate room: while the lawyer and I, deserted by the rest of the
company, were fain to put up with each other. I was a good deal chagrined at
the stately reserve of Mrs. Snapper, who, I thought, did not use me with all
the complaisance I deserved; and my companion declared that he had been a
traveller for twenty years, and never knew the stage coach rules so much
infringed before. As for the honourable gentlewoman I could not conceive the
meaning of her attachment to the lieutenant; and asked the lawyer if he knew
for which of the soldier’s virtues she admired him? The counsellor
facetiously replied, “I suppose the lady knows him to be an able
conveyancer, and wants him to make a settlement in tail.” I could not
help laughing at the archness of the barrister, who entertained me during
breakfast with a great deal of wit of the same kind, at the expense of our
fellow travellers; and among other things said, he was sorry to find the young
lady saddled with such incumbrances.</p>
<p>When we had made an end of our repast, and paid our reckoning, we went into the
coach, took our places, and bribed the driver with sixpence to revenge us on
the rest of his fare, by hurrying them away in the midst of their meal. This
task he performed to our satisfaction, after he had disturbed their enjoyment
with his importunate clamour. The mother and daughter obeyed the summons first,
and, coming to the coach door, were obliged to desire the coachman’s
assistance to get in, because the lawyer and I had agreed to show our
resentment by our neglect. They were no sooner seated, than the captain
appeared, as much heated as if he had been pursued a dozen miles by an enemy;
and immediately after him came the lady, not without some marks of disorder.
Having helped her up, he entered himself, growling a few oaths against the
coachman for his impertinent interruption; and the lawyer comforted him by
saying, that if he had suffered a nisi prius through the obstinacy of the
defendant, he might have an opportunity to join issue at the next stage. This
last expression gave offence to the grave gentlewoman, who told him, if she was
a man, she would make him repent of such obscenity, and thanked God she had
never been in such company before. At this insinuation the captain thought
himself under a necessity of espousing the lady’s cause; and accordingly
threatened to cut off the lawyer’s ears, if he should give his tongue any
such liberties for the future. The poor counsellor begged pardon, and universal
silence ensued.</p>
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