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<h2> LETTER XXVI </h2>
<p>COLONEL MORDEN, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ. SUNDAY NIGHT, SEPT. 10.</p>
<p>DEAR SIR,</p>
<p>According to my promise, I send you an account of matters here. Poor Mrs.
Norton was so very ill upon the road, that, slowly as the hearse moved,
and the chariot followed, I was afraid we should not have got her to St.
Albans. We put up there as I had intended. I was in hopes that she would
have been better for the stop: but I was forced to leave her behind me. I
ordered the maid-servant you were so considerately kind as to send down
with her, to be very careful of her; and left the chariot to attend her.
She deserves all the regard that can be paid her; not only upon my
cousin's account, but on her own—she is an excellent woman.</p>
<p>When we were within five miles of Harlowe-place, I put on a hand-gallop. I
ordered the hearse to proceed more slowly still, the cross-road we were in
being rough; and having more time before us than I wanted; for I wished
not the hearse to be in till near dusk. I got to Harlowe-place about four
o'clock. You may believe I found a mournful house. You desire me to be
very minute.</p>
<p>At my entrance into the court, they were all in motion. Every servant whom
I saw had swelled eyes, and looked with so much concern, that at first I
apprehended some new disaster had happened in the family. Mr. John and Mr.
Antony Harlowe and Mrs. Hervey were there. They all helped on one
another's grief, as they had before done each other's hardness of heart.</p>
<p>My cousin James met me at the entrance of the hall. His countenance
expressed a fixed concern; and he desired me to excuse his behaviour the
last time I was there.</p>
<p>My cousin Arabella came to me full of tears and grief.</p>
<p>O Cousin! said she, hanging upon my arm, I dare not ask you any questions!—About
the approach of the hearse, I suppose she meant.</p>
<p>I myself was full of grief; and, without going farther or speaking, sat
down in the hall in the first chair.</p>
<p>The brother sat on one hand of me, the sister on the other. Both were
silent. The latter in tears.</p>
<p>Mr. Antony Harlowe came to me soon after. His face was overspread with all
the appearance of woe. He requested me to walk into the parlour; where, as
he said, were all his fellow-mourners.</p>
<p>I attended him in. My cousins James and Arabella followed me.</p>
<p>A perfect concert of grief, as I may say, broke out the moment I entered
the parlour.</p>
<p>My cousin Harlowe, the dear creature's father, as soon as he saw me, said,
O Cousin, Cousin, of all our family, you are the only one who have nothing
to reproach yourself with!—You are a happy man!</p>
<p>The poor mother, bowing her head to me in speechless grief, sat with her
handkerchief held to her eyes with one hand. The other hand was held by
her sister Hervey, between both her's; Mrs. Hervey weeping upon it.</p>
<p>Near the window sat Mr. John Harlowe, his face and his body turned from
the sorrowing company; his eyes red and swelled.</p>
<p>My cousin Antony, at his re-entering the parlour, went towards Mrs.
Harlowe—Don't—dear Sister, said he!—Then towards my
cousin Harlowe— Don't—dear Brother!—Don't thus give way—And,
without being able to say another word, went to a corner of the parlour,
and, wanting himself the comfort he would fain have given, sunk into a
chair, and audibly sobbed.</p>
<p>Miss Arabella followed her uncle Antony, as he walked in before me, and
seemed as if she would have spoken to the pierced mother some words of
comfort. But she was unable to utter them, and got behind her mother's
chair; and, inclining her face over it, on the unhappy lady's shoulder,
seemed to claim the consolation that indulgent parent used, but then was
unable, to afford her.</p>
<p>Young Mr. Harlowe, with all his vehemence of spirit, was now subdued. His
self-reproaching conscience, no doubt, was the cause of it.</p>
<p>And what, Sir, must their thoughts be, which, at that moment, in a manner,
deprived them of all motion, and turned their speech into sighs and
groans!—How to be pitied, how greatly to be pitied! all of them! But
how much to be cursed that abhorred Lovelace, who, as it seems, by arts
uncommon, and a villany without example, has been the sole author of a woe
so complicated and extensive!—God judge me, as—But I stop—
the man (the man can I say?) is your friend!—He already suffers, you
tell me, in his intellect.—Restore him, Heaven, to that—If I
find the matter come out, as I apprehend it will—indeed her own hint
of his usage of her, as in her will, is enough—nor think, my beloved
cousin, thou darling of my heart! that thy gentle spirit, breathing
charity and forgiveness to the vilest of men, shall avail him!—But
once more I stop —forgive me, Sir!—Who could behold such a
scene, who could recollect it in order to describe it, (as minutely as you
wished me to relate how this unhappy family were affected on this sad
occasion,) every one of the mourners nearly related to himself, and not to
be exasperated against the author of all?</p>
<p>As I was the only person (grieved as I was myself) from whom any of them,
at that instant, could derive comfort; Let us not, said I, my dear Cousin,
approaching the inconsolable mother, give way to a grief, which, however
just, can now avail us nothing. We hurt ourselves, and cannot recall the
dear creature for whom we mourn. Nor would you wish it, if you know with
what assurance of eternal happiness she left the world—She is happy,
Madam!—depend upon it, she is happy! And comfort yourselves with
that assurance!</p>
<p>O Cousin, Cousin! cried the unhappy mother, withdrawing her hand from that
of her sister Hervey, and pressing mine with it, you know not what a child
I have lost!—Then in a low voice, and how lost!—That it is
that makes the loss insupportable.</p>
<p>They all joined in a kind of melancholy chorus, and each accused him and
herself, and some of them one another. But the eyes of all, in turn, were
cast upon my cousin James, as the person who had kept up the general
resentment against so sweet a creature. While he was hardly able to bear
his own remorse: nor Miss Harlowe her's; she breaking out into words, How
tauntingly did I write to her! How barbarously did I insult her! Yet how
patiently did she take it!—Who would have thought that she had been
so near her end!—O Brother, Brother! but for you!—But for you!—Double
not upon me, said he, my own woes! I have every thing before me that has
passed! I thought only to reclaim a dear creature that had erred! I
intended not to break her tender heart! But it was the villanous Lovelace
who did that—not any of us!—Yet, Cousin, did she not attribute
all to me?—I fear she did!—Tell me only, did she name me, did
she speak of me, in her last hours? I hope she, who could forgive the
greatest villain on earth, and plead that he may be safe from our
vengeance, I hope she could forgive me.</p>
<p>She died blessing you all; and justified rather than condemned your
severity to her.</p>
<p>Then they set up another general lamentation. We see, said her father,
enough we see, in her heart-piercing letters to us, what a happy frame she
was in a few days before her death—But did it hold to the last? Had
she no repinings? Had the dear child no heart burnings?</p>
<p>None at all!—I never saw, and never shall see, so blessed a
departure: and no wonder; for I never heard of such a preparation. Every
hour, for weeks together, were taken up in it. Let this be our comfort: we
need only to wish for so happy an end for ourselves, and for those who are
nearest to our hearts. We may any of us be grieved for acts of unkindness
to her: but had all happened that once she wished for, she could not have
made a happier, perhaps not so happy an end.</p>
<p>Dear soul! and Dear sweet soul! the father, uncles, sister, my cousin
Hervey, cried out all at once, in accents of anguish inexpressibly
affecting.</p>
<p>We must for ever be disturbed for those acts of unkindness to so sweet a
child, cried the unhappy mother!—Indeed! indeed! [softly to her
sister Hervey,] I have been too passive, much too passive in this case!—The
temporary quiet I have been so studious all my life to preserve, has cost
me everlasting disquiet!——There she stopt.</p>
<p>Dear Sister! was all Mrs. Hervey could say.</p>
<p>I have done but half my duty to the dearest and most meritorious of
children, resumed the sorrowing mother!—Nay, not half!—How
have we hardened our hearts against her!——Again her tears
denied passage to her words.</p>
<p>My dearest, dearest Sister!—again was all Mrs. Hervey could say.</p>
<p>Would to Heaven, proceeded, exclaiming, the poor mother, I had but once
seen her! Then, turning to my cousin James, and his sister—O my son!
O my Arabella! if WE were to receive as little mercy—And there again
she stopt, her tears interrupting her farther speech; every one, all the
time, remaining silent; their countenances showing a grief in their hearts
too big for expression.</p>
<p>Now you see, Mr. Belford, that my dearest cousin could be allowed all her
merit!—What a dreadful thing is after-reflection upon a conduct so
perverse and unnatural?</p>
<p>O this cursed friend of your's, Mr. Belford! This detested Lovelace!—To
him, to him is owing—</p>
<p>Pardon me, Sir. I will lay down my pen till I have recovered my temper.</p>
<p>ONE IN THE MORNING.</p>
<p>In vain, Sir, have I endeavoured to compose myself to rest. You wished me
to be very particular, and I cannot help it. This melancholy subject fills
my whole mind. I will proceed, though it be midnight.</p>
<p>About six o'clock the hearse came to the outward gate—the parish
church is at some distance; but the wind setting fair, the afflicted
family were struck, just before it came, into a fresh fit of grief, on
hearing the funeral bell tolled in a very solemn manner. A respect, as it
proved, and as they all guessed, paid to the memory of the dear deceased,
out of officious love, as the hearse passed near the church.</p>
<p>Judge, when their grief was so great in expectation of it, what it must be
when it arrived.</p>
<p>A servant came in to acquaint us with what its lumbering heavy noise up
the paved inner court-yard apprized us of before. He spoke not. He could
not speak. He looked, bowed, and withdrew.</p>
<p>I stept out. No one else could then stir. Her brother, however, soon
followed me. When I came to the door, I beheld a sight very affecting.</p>
<p>You have heard, Sir, how universally my dear cousin was beloved. By the
poor and middling sort especially, no young lady was ever so much beloved.
And with reason: she was the common patroness of all the honest poor in
her neighbourhood.</p>
<p>It is natural for us, in every deep and sincere grief, to interest all we
know in what is so concerning to ourselves. The servants of the family, it
seems, had told their friends, and those their's, that though, living,
their dear young lady could not be received nor looked upon, her body was
permitted to be brought home. The space of time was so confined, that
those who knew when she died, must easily guess near the time the hearse
was to come. A hearse, passing through country villages, and from London,
however slenderly attended, (for the chariot, as I have said, waited upon
poor Mrs. Norton,) takes every one's attention. Nor was it hard to guess
whose this must be, though not adorned by escutcheons, when the
cross-roads to Harlowe-place were taken, as soon as it came within six
miles of it; so that the hearse, and the solemn tolling of the bell, had
drawn together at least fifty of the neighbouring men, women, and
children, and some of good appearance. Not a soul of them, it seems, with
a dry eye, and each lamenting the death of this admired lady, who, as I am
told, never stirred out, but somebody was the better for her.</p>
<p>These, when the coffin was taken out of the hearse, crowding about it,
hindered, for a few moments, its being carried in; the young people
struggling who should bear it; and yet, with respectful whisperings,
rather than clamorous contention. A mark of veneration I had never before
seen paid, upon any occasion in all my travels, from the under-bred many,
from whom noise is generally inseparable in all their emulations.</p>
<p>At last six maidens were permitted to carry it in by the six handles.</p>
<p>The corpse was thus borne, with the most solemn respect, into the hall,
and placed for the present upon two stools there. The plates, and emblems,
and inscription, set every one gazing upon it, and admiring it. The more,
when they were told, that all was of her own ordering. They wished to be
permitted a sight of the corpse; but rather mentioned this as their wish
than as their hope. When they had all satisfied their curiosity, and
remarked upon the emblems, they dispersed with blessings upon her memory,
and with tears and lamentations; pronouncing her to be happy; and
inferring, were she not so, what would become of them? While others ran
over with repetitions of the good she delighted to do. Nor were there
wanting those among them, who heaped curses upon the man who was the
author of her fall.</p>
<p>The servants of the family then got about the coffin. They could not
before: and that afforded a new scene of sorrow: but a silent one; for
they spoke only by their eyes, and by sighs, looking upon the lid, and
upon one another, by turns, with hands lifted up. The presence of their
young master possibly might awe them, and cause their grief to be
expressed only in dumb show.</p>
<p>As for Mr. James Harlowe, (who accompanied me, but withdrew when he saw
the crowd,) he stood looking upon the lid, when the people had left it,
with a fixed attention: yet, I dare say, knew not a symbol or letter upon
it at that moment, had the question been asked him. In a profound reverie
he stood, his arms folded, his head on one side, and marks of stupefaction
imprinted upon every feature.</p>
<p>But when the corpse was carried into the lesser parlour, adjoining to the
hall, which she used to call her parlour, and put upon a table in the
midst of the room, and the father and mother, the two uncles, her aunt
Hervey, and her sister, came in, joining her brother and me, with
trembling feet, and eager woe, the scene was still more affecting. Their
sorrow was heightened, no doubt, by the remembrance of their unforgiving
severity: and now seeing before them the receptacle that contained the
glory of their family, who so lately was driven thence by their indiscreet
violence; never, never more to be restored to them no wonder that their
grief was more than common grief.</p>
<p>They would have withheld the mother, it seems, from coming in. But when
they could not, though undetermined before, they all bore her company, led
on by an impulse they could not resist. The poor lady but just cast her
eye upon the coffin, and then snatched it away, retiring with passionate
grief towards the window; yet, addressing herself, with clasped hands, as
if to her beloved daughter: O my Child, my Child! cried she; thou pride of
my hope! Why was I not permitted to speak pardon and peace to thee!—O
forgive thy cruel mother!</p>
<p>Her son (his heart then softened, as his eyes showed,) besought her to
withdraw: and her woman looking in at that moment, he called her to assist
him in conducting her lady into the middle parlour: and then returning,
met his father going out of the door, who also had but just cast his eye
on the coffin, and yielded to my entreaties to withdraw. His grief was too
deep for utterance, till he saw his son coming in; and then, fetching a
heavy groan, Never, said he, was sorrow like my sorrow! —O Son! Son!—in
a reproaching accent, his face turned from him.</p>
<p>I attended him through the middle parlour, endeavouring to console him.
His lady was there in agonies. She took his eye. He made a motion towards
her: O my dear, said he—But turning short, his eyes as full as his
heart, he hastened through to the great parlour: and when there, he
desired me to leave him to himself.</p>
<p>The uncles and sister looked and turned away, very often, upon the
emblems, in silent sorrow. Mrs. Hervey would have read to them the
inscription—These words she did read, Here the wicked cease from
troubling—But could read no farther. Her tears fell in large drops
upon the plate she was contemplating; and yet she was desirous of
gratifying a curiosity that mingled impatience with her grief because she
could not gratify it, although she often wiped her eyes as they flowed.</p>
<p>Judge you, Mr. Belford, (for you have great humanity,) how I must be
affected. Yet was I forced to try to comfort them all.</p>
<p>But here I will close this letter, in order to send it to you in the
morning early. Nevertheless, I will begin another, upon supposition that
my doleful prolixity will be disagreeable to you. Indeed I am altogether
indisposed for rest, as I have mentioned before. So can do nothing but
write. I have also more melancholy scenes to paint. My pen, if I may say
so, is untired. These scenes are fresh upon my memory: and I myself,
perhaps, may owe to you the favour of a review of them, with such other
papers as you shall think proper to oblige me with, when heavy grief has
given way to milder melancholy.</p>
<p>My servant, in his way to you with this letter, shall call at St. Alban's
upon the good woman, that he may inform you how she does. Miss Arabella
asked me after her, when I withdrew to my chamber; to which she
complaisantly accompanied me. She was much concerned at the bad way we
left her in; and said her mother would be more so.</p>
<p>No wonder that the dear departed, who foresaw the remorse that would fall
to the lot of this unhappy family when they came to have the news of her
death confirmed to them, was so grieved for their apprehended grief, and
endeavoured to comfort them by her posthumous letters. But it was still a
greater generosity in her to try to excuse them to me, as she did when we
were alone together, a few hours before she died; and to aggravate more
than (as far as I can find) she ought to have done, the only error she was
ever guilty of. The more freely, however, perhaps, (exalted creature!)
that I might think the better of her friends, although at her own expense.
I am, dear Sir,</p>
<p>Your faithful and obedient servant, WM. MORDEN.</p>
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