<h2>CHAPTER XXXVI.</h2>
<p>Agnes was driven from service to service—her deficiency
in the knowledge of a mere drudge, or her lost character, pursued
her wherever she went—at length, becoming wholly destitute,
she gladly accepted a place where the latter misfortune was not
of the least impediment.</p>
<p>In one of these habitations, where continual misery is dressed
in continual smiles; where extreme of poverty is concealed by
extreme of finery; where wine dispenses mirth only by dispensing
forgetfulness; and where female beauty is so cheap, so complying,
that, while it inveigles, it disgusts the man of pleasure: in one
of those houses, to attend upon its wretched inhabitants, Agnes
was hired. Her feelings of rectitude submitted to those of
hunger; her principles of virtue (which the loss of virtue had
not destroyed) received a shock when she engaged to be the
abettor of vice, from which her delicacy, morality, and religion
shrunk; but persons of honour and of reputation would not employ
her: was she then to perish? That, perhaps, was easy to
resolve; but she had a child to leave behind! a child, from whom
to part for a day was a torment. Yet, before she submitted
to a situation which filled her mind with a kind of loathing
horror, often she paced up and down the street in which William
lived, looked wistfully at his house, and sometimes, lost to all
her finer feelings of independent pride, thought of sending a
short petition to him; but, at the idea of a repulse, and of that
frowning brow which she knew William <i>could</i> dart on her
petitions, she preferred death, or the most degrading life, to
the trial.</p>
<p>It was long since that misfortune and dishonour had made her
callous to the good or ill opinion of all the world, except
<i>his</i>; and the fear of drawing upon her his increased
contempt was still, at the crisis of applying, so powerful, that
she found she dared not hazard a reproof from him even in the
person of his father, whose rigour she had already more than once
experienced, in the frequent harsh messages conveyed to her with
the poor stipend for her boy.</p>
<p>Awed by the rigid and pious character of the new bishop, the
growing reputation, and rising honours of his son, she mistook
the appearance of moral excellence for moral excellence itself,
and felt her own unworthiness even to become the supplicant of
those great men.</p>
<p>Day after day she watched those parts of the town through
which William’s chariot was accustomed to drive; but to see
the <i>carriage</i> was all to which she aspired; a feeling, not
to be described, forced her to cast her eyes upon the earth as it
drew near to her; and when it had passed, she beat her breast,
and wept that she had not seen <i>him</i>.</p>
<p>Impressed with the superiority of others, and her own abject
and disgustful state, she cried, “Let me herd with those
who won’t despise me; let me only see faces whereon I can
look without confusion and terror; let me associate with wretches
like myself, rather than force my shame before those who are so
good they can but scorn and hate me.”</p>
<p>With a mind thus languishing for sympathy in disgrace, she
entered a servant in the house just now described. There
disregarding the fatal proverb against “<i>evil
communications</i>,” she had not the firmness to be an
exception to the general rule. That pliant disposition,
which had yielded to the licentious love of William, stooped to
still baser prostitution in company still more depraved.</p>
<p>At first she shuddered at those practices she saw, at those
conversations she heard, and blest herself that poverty, not
inclination, had caused her to be a witness of such profligacy,
and had condemned her in this vile abode to be a servant, rather
than in the lower rank of mistress. Use softened those
horrors every day; at length self-defence, the fear of ridicule,
and the hope of favour, induced her to adopt that very conduct
from which her heart revolted.</p>
<p>In her sorrowful countenance and fading charms there yet
remained attraction for many visitors; and she now submitted to
the mercenary profanations of love, more odious, as her mind had
been subdued by its most captivating, most endearing joys.</p>
<p>While incessant regret whispered to her “that she ought
to have endured every calamity rather than this,” she thus
questioned her nice sense of wrong, “Why, why respect
myself, since no other respects me? Why set a value on my
own feelings when no one else does?”</p>
<p>Degraded in her own judgment, she doubted her own
understanding when it sometimes told her she had deserved better
treatment; for she felt herself a fool in comparison with her
learned seducer and the rest who despised her. “And
why,” she continued, “should I ungratefully persist
to contemn women who alone are so kind as to accept me for a
companion? Why refuse conformity to their customs, since
none of my sex besides will admit me to their society a partaker
of virtuous habits?”</p>
<p>In speculation these arguments appeared reasonable, and she
pursued their dictates; but in the practice of the life in which
she plunged she proved the fallacy of the system, and at times
tore her hair with frantic sorrow, that she had not continued in
the mid-way of guilt, and so preserved some portion of
self-approbation, to recompense her in a small degree, for the
total loss of the esteem of all the reputable world.</p>
<p>But she had gone too far to recede. Could she now have
recalled her innocence, even that remnant she brought with her to
London, experience would have taught her to have given up her
child, lived apart from him, and once more with the brute
creation, rather than to have mingled with her present
society. Now, alas! the time for flying was past; all
prudent choice was over, even all reflection was gone for ever,
or only admitted on compulsion, when it imperiously forced its
way amidst the scenes of tumultuous mirth or licentious passion,
of distracted riot, shameless effrontery, and wild intoxication,
when it <i>would</i> force its way, even through the walls of a
brothel.</p>
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