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<h2> LETTER LII </h2>
<p>MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ. FRIDAY, JULY 28.</p>
<p>I have three letters of thine to take notice of:* but am divided in my
mind, whether to quarrel with thee on thy unmerciful reflections, or to
thank thee for thy acceptable particularity and diligence. But several of
my sweet dears have I, indeed, in my time, made to cry and laugh before
the cry could go off the other: Why may I not, therefore, curse and
applaud thee in the same moment? So take both in one: and what follows, as
it shall rise from my pen.</p>
<p>* Letters XLVI. XLVII. and XLVIII. of this volume.</p>
<p>How often have I ingenuously confessed my sins against this excellent
creature?—Yet thou never sparest me, although as bad a man as
myself. Since then I get so little by my confessions, I had a good mind to
try to defend myself; and that not only from antient and modern story, but
from common practice; and yet avoid repeating any thing I have suggested
before in my own behalf.</p>
<p>I am in a humour to play the fool with my pen: briefly then, from antient
story first:—Dost thou not think that I am as much entitled to
forgiveness on Miss Harlowe's account, as Virgil's hero was on Queen
Dido's? For what an ungrateful varlet was that vagabond to the hospitable
princess, who had willingly conferred upon him the last favour?—Stealing
away, (whence, I suppose, the ironical phrase of trusty Trojan to this
day,) like a thief—pretendedly indeed at the command of the gods;
but could that be, when the errand he went upon was to rob other princes,
not only of their dominions, but of their lives?—Yet this fellow is,
at every word, the pious Æneas, with the immortal bard who celebrates him.</p>
<p>Should Miss Harlowe even break her heart, (which Heaven forbid!) for the
usage she has received, (to say nothing of her disappointed pride, to
which her death would be attributable, more than to reason,) what
comparison will her fate hold to Queen Dido's? And have I half the
obligation to her, that Æneas had to the Queen of Carthage? The latter
placing a confidence, the former none, in her man?—Then, whom else
have I robbed? Whom else have I injured? Her brother's worthless life I
gave him, instead of taking any man's; while the Trojan vagabond destroyed
his thousands. Why then should it not be the pious Lovelace, as well as
the pious Æneas? For, dost thou think, had a conflagration happened, and
had it been in my power, that I would not have saved my old Anchises, (as
he did his from the Ilion bonfire,) even at the expense of my Creüsa, had
I a wife of that name?</p>
<p>But for a more modern instance in my favour—Have I used Miss
Harlowe, as our famous Maiden Queen, as she was called, used one of her
own blood, a sister-queen, who threw herself into her protection from her
rebel-subjects, and whom she detained prisoner eighteen years, and at last
cut off her head? Yet do not honest protestants pronounce her pious too?—And
call her particularly their Queen?</p>
<p>As to common practice—Who, let me ask, that has it in his power to
gratify a predominant passion, be it what it will, denies himself the
gratification?—Leaving it to cooler deliberation, (and, if he be a
great man, to his flatterers,) to find a reason for it afterwards?</p>
<p>Then, as to the worst part of my treatment of this lady, How many men are
there, who, as well as I, have sought, by intoxicating liquors, first to
inebriate, then to subdue? What signifies what the potations were, when
the same end was in view?</p>
<p>Let me tell thee, upon the whole, that neither the Queen of Carthage, nor
the Queen of Scots, would have thought they had any reason to complain of
cruelty, had they been used no worse than I have used the queen of my
heart: And then do I not aspire with my whole soul to repair by marriage?
Would the pious Æneas, thinkest thou, have done such a piece of justice by
Dido, had she lived?</p>
<p>Come, come, Belford, let people run away with notions as they will, I am
comparatively a very innocent man. And if by these, and other like
reasonings, I have quieted my own conscience, a great end is answered.
What have I to do with the world?</p>
<p>And now I sit me peaceably down to consider thy letters.</p>
<p>I hope thy pleas in my favour,* when she gave thee, (so generously gave
thee,) for me my letters, were urged with an honest energy. But I suspect
thee much for being too ready to give up thy client. Then thou hast such a
misgiving aspect, an aspect rather inviting rejection than carrying
persuasion with it; and art such an hesitating, such a humming and hawing
caitiff; that I shall attribute my failure, if I do fail, rather to the
inability and ill looks of my advocate, than to my cause. Again, thou art
deprived of the force men of our cast give to arguments; for she won't let
thee swear!—Art, moreover, a very heavy, thoughtless fellow; tolerable
only at a second rebound; a horrid dunce at the impromptu. These,
encountering with such a lady, are great disadvantages.—And still a
greater is thy balancing, (as thou dost at present,) between old rakery
and new reformation; since this puts thee into the same situation with
her, as they told me, at Leipsick, Martin Luther was in, at the first
public dispute which he held in defence of his supposed new doctrines with
Eckius. For Martin was then but a linsey-wolsey reformer. He retained some
dogmas, which, by natural consequence, made others, that he held,
untenable. So that Eckius, in some points, had the better of him. But,
from that time, he made clear work, renouncing all that stood in his way:
and then his doctrines ran upon all fours. He was never puzzled
afterwards; and could boldly declare that he would defend them in the face
of angels and men; and to his friends, who would have dissuaded him from
venturing to appear before the Emperor Charles at Spires, That, were there
as many devils at Spires, as tiles upon the houses, he would go. An answer
that is admired by every protestant Saxon to this day.</p>
<p>* See Letter XLVII. of this volume.</p>
<p>Since then thy unhappy awkwardness destroys the force of thy arguments, I
think thou hadst better (for the present, however) forbear to urge her on
the subject of accepting the reparation I offer; lest the continual
teasing of her to forgive me should but strengthen her in her denials of
forgiveness; till, for consistency sake, she'll be forced to adhere to a
resolution so often avowed—Whereas, if left to herself, a little
time, and better health, which will bring on better spirits, will give her
quicker resentments; those quicker resentments will lead her into
vehemence; that vehemence will subside, and turn into expostulation and
parley: my friends will then interpose, and guaranty for me: and all our
trouble on both sides will be over.—Such is the natural course of
things.</p>
<p>I cannot endure thee for thy hopelessness in the lady's recovery;* and
that in contradiction to the doctor and apothecary.</p>
<p>* See Letter XLVII. of this volume.</p>
<p>Time, in the words of Congreve, thou sayest, will give increase to her
afflictions. But why so? Knowest thou not that those words (so contrary to
common experience) were applied to the case of a person, while passion was
in its full vigour?—At such a time, every one in a heavy grief
thinks the same: but as enthusiasts do by Scripture, so dost thou by the
poets thou hast read: any thing that carries the most distant allusion
from either to the case in hand, is put down by both for gospel, however
incongruous to the general scope of either, and to that case. So once, in
a pulpit, I heard one of the former very vehemently declare himself to be
a dead dog; when every man, woman, and child, were convinced to the
contrary by his howling.</p>
<p>I can tell thee that, if nothing else will do, I am determined, in spite
of thy buskin-airs, and of thy engagements for me to the contrary, to see
her myself.</p>
<p>Face to face have I known many a quarrel made up, which distance would
have kept alive, and widened. Thou wilt be a madder Jack than he in the
tale of a Tub, if thou givest an active opposition to this interview.</p>
<p>In short, I cannot bear the thought, that a woman whom once I had bound to
me in the silken cords of love, should slip through my fingers, and be
able, while my heart flames out with a violent passion for her, to despise
me, and to set both love and me at defiance. Thou canst not imagine how
much I envy thee, and her doctor, and her apothecary, and every one who I
hear are admitted to her presence and conversation; and wish to be the one
or the other in turn.</p>
<p>Wherefore, if nothing else will do, I will see her. I'll tell thee of an
admirable expedient, just come cross me, to save thy promise, and my own.</p>
<p>Mrs. Lovick, you say, is a good woman: if the lady be worse, you shall
advise her to send for a parson to pray by her: unknown to her, unknown to
the lady, unknown to thee, (for so it may pass,) I will contrive to be the
man, petticoated out, and vested in a gown and cassock. I once, for a
certain purpose, did assume the canonicals; and I was thought to make a
fine sleek appearance; my broad rose-bound beaver became me mightily; and
I was much admired upon the whole by all who saw me.</p>
<p>Methinks it must be charmingly a propos to see me kneeling down by her
bed-side, (I am sure I shall pray heartily,) beginning out of the
common-prayer book the sick-office for the restoration of the languishing
lady, and concluding with an exhortation to charity and forgiveness for
myself.</p>
<p>I will consider of this matter. But, in whatever shape I shall choose to
appear, of this thou mayest assure thyself, I will apprize thee beforehand
of my visit, that thou mayst contrive to be out of the way, and to know
nothing of the matter. This will save thy word; and, as to mine, can she
think worse of me than she does at present?</p>
<p>An indispensable of true love and profound respect, in thy wise opinion,*
is absurdity or awkwardness.—'Tis surprising that thou shouldst be
one of those partial mortals who take their measures of right and wrong
from what they find themselves to be, and cannot help being!—So
awkwardness is a perfection in the awkward!—At this rate, no man
ever can be in the wrong. But I insist upon it, that an awkward fellow
will do every thing awkwardly: and, if he be like thee, will, when he has
done foolishly, rack his unmeaning brain for excuses as awkward as his
first fault. Respectful love is an inspirer of actions worthy of itself;
and he who cannot show it, where he most means it, manifests that he is an
unpolite rough creature, a perfect Belford, and has it not in him.</p>
<p>* See Letter XLVI. of this volume.</p>
<p>But here thou'lt throw out that notable witticism, that my outside is the
best of me, thine the worst of thee; and that, if I set about mending my
mind, thou wilt mend thy appearance.</p>
<p>But, pr'ythee, Jack, don't stay for that; but set about thy amendment in
dress when thou leavest off thy mourning; for why shouldst thou prepossess
in thy disfavour all those who never saw thee before?—It is hard to
remove early-taken prejudices, whether of liking or distaste. People will
hunt, as I may say, for reasons to confirm first impressions, in
compliment to their own sagacity: nor is it every mind that has the
ingenuousness to confess itself half mistaken, when it finds itself to be
wrong. Thou thyself art an adept in the pretended science of reading men;
and, whenever thou art out, wilt study to find some reasons why it was
more probable that thou shouldst have been right; and wilt watch every
motion and action, and every word and sentiment, in the person thou hast
once censured, for proofs, in order to help thee to revive and maintain
thy first opinion. And, indeed, as thou seldom errest on the favourable
side, human nature is so vile a thing that thou art likely to be right
five times in six on what thou findest in thine own heart, to have reason
to compliment thyself on thy penetration.</p>
<p>Here is preachment for thy preachment: and I hope, if thou likest thy own,
thou wilt thank me for mine; the rather, as thou mayest be the better for
it, if thou wilt: since it is calculated for thy own meridian.</p>
<p>Well, but the lady refers my destiny to the letter she has written,
actually written, to Miss Howe; to whom it seems she has given her reasons
why she will not have me. I long to know the contents of this letter: but
am in great hopes that she has so expressed her denials, as shall give
room to think she only wants to be persuaded to the contrary, in order to
reconcile herself to herself.</p>
<p>I could make some pretty observations upon one or two places of the lady's
mediation: but, wicked as I am thought to be, I never was so abandoned as
to turn into ridicule, or even to treat with levity, things sacred. I
think it the highest degree of ill manners to jest upon those subjects
which the world in general look upon with veneration, and call divine. I
would not even treat the mythology of the heathen to a heathen, with the
ridicule that perhaps would fairly lie from some of the absurdities that
strike every common observer. Nor, when at Rome, and in other popish
countries, did I ever behave indecently at those ceremonies which I
thought very extraordinary: for I saw some people affected, and seemingly
edified, by them; and I contented myself to think, though they were any
good end to the many, there was religion enough in them, or civil policy
at least, to exempt them from the ridicule of even a bad man who had
common sense and good manners.</p>
<p>For the like reason I have never given noisy or tumultuous instances of
dislike to a new play, if I thought it ever so indifferent: for I
concluded, first, that every one was entitled to see quietly what he paid
for: and, next, as the theatre (the epitome of the world) consisted of
pit, boxes, and gallery, it was hard, I thought, if there could be such a
performance exhibited as would not please somebody in that mixed
multitude: and, if it did, those somebodies had as much right to enjoy
their own judgments, undisturbedly, as I had to enjoy mine.</p>
<p>This was my way of showing my disapprobation; I never went again. And as a
man is at his option, whether he will go to a play or not, he has not the
same excuse for expressing his dislike clamorously as if he were compelled
to see it.</p>
<p>I have ever, thou knowest, declared against those shallow libertines, who
could not make out their pretensions to wit, but on two subjects, to which
every man of true wit will scorn to be beholden: PROFANENESS and
OBSCENITY, I mean; which must shock the ears of every man or woman of
sense, without answering any end, but of showing a very low and abandoned
nature. And, till I came acquainted with the brutal Mowbray, [no great
praise to myself from such a tutor,] I was far from making so free as I do
now, with oaths and curses; for then I was forced to out-swear him
sometimes in order to keep him in his allegiance to me his general: nay, I
often check myself to myself, for this empty unprofitable liberty of
speech; in which we are outdone by the sons of the common-sewer.</p>
<p>All my vice is women, and the love of plots and intrigues; and I cannot
but wonder how I fell into those shocking freedoms of speech; since,
generally speaking, they are far from helping forward my main end: only,
now-and-then, indeed, a little novice rises to one's notice, who seems to
think dress, and oaths, and curses, the diagnostics of the rakish spirit
she is inclined to favour: and indeed they are the only qualifications
that some who are called rakes and pretty fellows have to boast of. But
what must the women be, who can be attracted by such empty-souled
profligates!—since wickedness with wit is hardly tolerable; but,
without it, is equally shocking and contemptible.</p>
<p>There again is preachment for thy preachment; and thou wilt be apt to
think that I am reforming too: but no such matter. If this were new light
darting in upon me, as thy morality seems to be to thee, something of this
kind might be apprehended: but this was always my way of thinking; and I
defy thee, or any of thy brethren, to name a time when I have either
ridiculed religion, or talked obscenely. On the contrary, thou knowest how
often I have checked that bear, in love-matters, Mowbray, and the finical
Tourville, and thyself too, for what ye have called the double-entendre.
In love, as in points that required a manly-resentment, it has always been
my maxim, to act, rather than to talk; and I do assure thee, as to the
first, the women themselves will excuse the one sooner than the other.</p>
<p>As to the admiration thou expressest for the books of scripture, thou art
certainly right in it. But 'tis strange to me, that thou wert ignorant of
their beauty, and noble simplicity, till now. Their antiquity always made
me reverence them: And how was it possible that thou couldest not, for
that reason, if for no other, give them a perusal?</p>
<p>I'll tell thee a short story, which I had from my tutor, admonishing me
against exposing myself by ignorant wonder, when I should quit college, to
go to town, or travel.</p>
<p>'The first time Dryden's Alexander's Feast fell into his hands, he told
me, he was prodigiously charmed with it: and, having never heard any body
speak of it before, thought, as thou dost of the Bible, that he had made a
new discovery.</p>
<p>'He hastened to an appointment which he had with several wits, (for he was
then in town,) one of whom was a noted critic, who, according to him, had
more merit than good fortune; for all the little nibblers in wit, whose
writings would not stand the test of criticism, made it, he said, a common
cause to run him down, as men would a mad dog.</p>
<p>'The young gentleman (for young he then was) set forth magnificently in
the praises of that inimitable performance; and gave himself airs of
second-hand merit, for finding out its beauties.</p>
<p>'The old bard heard him out with a smile, which the collegian took for
approbation, till he spoke; and then it was in these mortifying words:
'Sdeath, Sir, where have you lived till now, or with what sort of company
have you conversed, young as you are, that you have never before heard of
the finest piece in the English language?'</p>
<p>This story had such an effect upon me, who had ever a proud heart, and
wanted to be thought a clever fellow, that, in order to avoid the like
disgrace, I laid down two rules to myself. The first, whenever I went into
company where there were strangers, to hear every one of them speak,
before I gave myself liberty to prate: The other, if I found any of them
above my match, to give up all title to new discoveries, contenting myself
to praise what they praised, as beauties familiar to me, though I had
never heard of them before. And so, by degrees, I got the reputation of a
wit myself: and when I threw off all restraint, and books, and learned
conversation, and fell in with some of our brethren who are now wandering
in Erebus, and with such others as Belton, Mowbray, Tourville, and
thyself, I set up on my own stock; and, like what we have been told of Sir
Richard, in his latter days, valued myself on being the emperor of the
company; for, having fathomed the depth of them all, and afraid of no
rival but thee, whom also I had got a little under, (by my gaiety and
promptitude at least) I proudly, like Addison's Cato, delighted to give
laws to my little senate.</p>
<p>Proceed with thee by-and-by.</p>
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