<SPAN name="V3_CVIII" id="V3_CVIII"></SPAN>
<h2>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
<p>Here then was the termination of an immense series of labours, upon which
no man could have looked back without astonishment, or forward without a
sentiment bordering on despair. It was at a price which defies estimation
that I had purchased this resting-place; whether we consider the efforts it
had cost me to escape from the walls of my prison, or the dangers and
anxieties to which I had been a prey, from that hour to the present.</p>
<p>But why do I call the point at which I was now arrived at a
resting-place? Alas, it was diametrically the reverse! It was my first and
immediate business to review all the projects of disguise I had hitherto
conceived, to derive every improvement I could invent from the practice to
which I had been subjected, and to manufacture a veil of concealment more
impenetrable than ever. This was an effort to which I could see no end. In
ordinary cases the hue and cry after a supposed offender is a matter of
temporary operation; but ordinary cases formed no standard for the colossal
intelligence of Mr. Falkland. For the same reason, London, which appears an
inexhaustible reservoir of concealment to the majority of mankind, brought
no such consolatory sentiment to my mind. Whether life were worth accepting
on such terms I cannot pronounce. I only know that I persisted in this
exertion of my faculties, through a sort of parental love that men are
accustomed to entertain for their intellectual offspring; the more thought I
had expended in rearing it to its present perfection, the less did I find
myself disposed to abandon it. Another motive, not less strenuously exciting
me to perseverance, was the ever-growing repugnance I felt to injustice and
arbitrary power.</p>
<p>The first evening of my arrival in town I slept at an obscure inn in the
borough of Southwark, choosing that side of the metropolis, on account of
its lying entirely wide of the part of England from which I came. I entered
the inn in the evening in my countryman's frock; and, having paid for my
lodging before I went to bed, equipped myself next morning as differently as
my wardrobe would allow, and left the house before day. The frock I made up
into a small packet, and, having carried it to a distance as great as I
thought necessary, I dropped it in the corner of an alley through which I
passed. My next care was to furnish myself with another suit of apparel,
totally different from any to which I had hitherto had recourse. The
exterior which I was now induced to assume was that of a Jew. One of the
gang of thieves upon ---- forest, had been of that race; and by the talent
of mimicry, which I have already stated myself to possess, I could copy
their pronunciation of the English language, sufficiently to answer such
occasions as were likely to present themselves. One of the preliminaries I
adopted, was to repair to a quarter of the town in which great numbers of
this people reside, and study their complexion and countenance. Having made
such provision as my prudence suggested to me, I retired for that night to
an inn in the midway between Mile-end and Wapping. Here I accoutred myself
in ray new habiliments; and, having employed the same precautions as before,
retired from my lodging at a time least exposed to observation. It is
unnecessary to describe the particulars of my new equipage; suffice it to
say, that one of my cares was to discolour my complexion, and give it the
dun and sallow hue which is in most instances characteristic of the tribe to
which I assumed to belong; and that when my metamorphosis was finished, I
could not, upon the strictest examination, conceive that any one could have
traced out the person of Caleb Williams in this new disguise.</p>
<p>Thus far advanced in the execution of my project. I deemed it advisable
to procure a lodging, and change my late wandering life for a stationary
one. In this lodging I constantly secluded myself from the rising to the
setting of the sun; the periods I allowed for exercise and air were few, and
those few by night. I was even cautious of so much as approaching the window
of my apartment, though upon the attic story; a principle I laid down to
myself was, not wantonly and unnecessarily to expose myself to risk, however
slight that risk might appear.</p>
<p>Here let me pause for a moment, to bring before the reader, in the way in
which it was impressed upon my mind, the nature of my situation. I was born
free: I was born healthy, vigorous, and active, complete in all the
lineaments and members of a human body. I was not born indeed to the
possession of hereditary wealth; but I had a better inheritance, an
enterprising mind, an inquisitive spirit, a liberal ambition. In a word, I
accepted my lot with willingness and content; I did not fear but I should
make my cause good in the lists of existence. I was satisfied to aim at
small things; I was pleased to play at first for a slender stake; I was more
willing to grow than to descend in my individual significance.</p>
<p>The free spirit and the firm heart with which I commenced, one
circumstance was sufficient to blast. I was ignorant of the power which the
institutions of society give to one man over others; I had fallen unwarily
into the hands of a person who held it as his fondest wish to oppress and
destroy me.</p>
<p>I found myself subjected, undeservedly on my part, to all the
disadvantages which mankind, if they reflected upon them, would hesitate to
impose on acknowledged guilt. In every human countenance I feared to find
the countenance of an enemy. I shrunk from the vigilance of every human eye.
I dared not open my heart to the best affections of our nature. I was shut
up, a deserted, solitary wretch, in the midst of my species. I dared not
look for the consolations of friendship; but, instead of seeking to identify
myself with the joys and sorrows of others, and exchanging the delicious
gifts of confidence and sympathy, was compelled to centre my thoughts and my
vigilance in myself. My life was all a lie. I had a counterfeit character to
support. I had counterfeit manners to assume. My gait, my gestures, my
accents, were all of them to be studied. I was not free to indulge, no not
one, honest sally of the soul. Attended with these disadvantages, I was to
procure myself a subsistence, a subsistence to be acquired with infinite
precautions, and to be consumed without the hope of enjoyment.</p>
<p>This, even this, I was determined to endure; to put my shoulder to the
burthen, and support it with unshrinking firmness. Let it not however be
supposed that I endured it without repining and abhorrence. My time was
divided between the terrors of an animal that skulks from its pursuers, the
obstinacy of unshrinking firmness, and that elastic revulsion that from time
to time seems to shrivel the very hearts of the miserable. If at some
moments I fiercely defied all the rigours of my fate, at others, and those
of frequent recurrence, I sunk into helpless despondence. I looked forward
without hope through the series of my existence, tears of anguish rushed
from my eyes, my courage became extinct, and I cursed the conscious life
that was reproduced with every returning day.</p>
<p>"Why," upon such occasions I was accustomed to exclaim, "why am I
overwhelmed with the load of existence? Why are all these engines at work to
torment me? I am no murderer; yet, if I were, what worse could I be fated to
suffer? How vile, squalid, and disgraceful is the state to which I am
condemned! This is not my place in the roll of existence, the place for
which either my temper or my understanding has prepared me! To what purpose
serve the restless aspirations of my soul, but to make me, like a frighted
bird, beat myself in vain against the enclosure of my cage? Nature,
barbarous nature! to me thou hast proved indeed the worst of step-mothers;
endowed me with wishes insatiate, and sunk me in never-ending
degradation!"</p>
<p>I might have thought myself more secure if I had been in possession of
money upon which to subsist. The necessity of earning for myself the means
of existence, evidently tended to thwart the plan of secrecy to which I was
condemned. Whatever labour I adopted, or deemed myself qualified to
discharge, it was first to be considered how I was to be provided with
employment, and where I was to find an employer or purchaser for my
commodities. In the mean time I had no alternative. The little money with
which I had escaped from the blood-hunters was almost expended.</p>
<p>After the minutest consideration I was able to bestow upon this question.
I determined that literature should be the field of my first experiment. I
had read of money being acquired in this way, and of prices given by the
speculators in this sort of ware to its proper manufacturers. My
qualifications I esteemed at a slender valuation. I was not without a
conviction that experience and practice must pave the way to excellent
production. But, though of these I was utterly destitute, my propensities
had always led me in this direction; and my early thirst of knowledge had
conducted me to a more intimate acquaintance with books, than could perhaps
have been expected under my circumstances. If my literary pretensions were
slight, the demand I intended to make upon them was not great. All I asked
was a subsistence; and I was persuaded few persons could subsist upon
slenderer means than myself. I also considered this as a temporary
expedient, and hoped that accident or time might hereafter place me in a
less precarious situation. The reasons that principally determined my choice
were, that this employment called upon me for the least preparation, and
could, as I thought, be exercised with least observation.</p>
<p>There was a solitary woman, of middle age, who tenanted a chamber in this
house, upon the same floor with my own. I had no sooner determined upon the
destination of my industry than I cast my eye upon her as the possible
instrument for disposing of my productions. Excluded as I was from all
intercourse with my species in general, I found pleasure in the occasional
exchange of a few words with this inoffensive and good-humoured creature,
who was already of an age to preclude scandal. She lived upon a very small
annuity, allowed her by a distant relation, a woman of quality, who,
possessed of thousands herself, had no other anxiety with respect to this
person than that she should not contaminate her alliance by the exertion of
honest industry. This humble creature was of a uniformly cheerful and active
disposition, unacquainted alike with the cares of wealth and the pressure of
misfortune. Though her pretensions were small, and her information slender,
she was by no means deficient in penetration. She remarked the faults and
follies of mankind with no contemptible discernment; but her temper was of
so mild and forgiving a cast, as would have induced most persons to believe
that she perceived nothing of the matter. Her heart overflowed with the milk
of kindness. She was sincere and ardent in her attachments, and never did
she omit a service which she perceived herself able to render to a human
being.</p>
<p>Had it not been for these qualifications of temper, I should probably
have found that my appearance, that of a deserted, solitary lad, of Jewish
extraction, effectually precluded my demands upon her kindness. But I
speedily perceived, from her manner of receiving and returning civilities of
an indifferent sort, that her heart was too noble to have its effusions
checked by any base and unworthy considerations. Encouraged by these
preliminaries, I determined to select her as my agent. I found her willing
and alert in the business I proposed to her. That I might anticipate
occasions of suspicion, I frankly told her that, for reasons which I wished
to be excused from relating, but which, if related, I was sure would not
deprive me of her good opinion, I found it necessary, for the present, to
keep myself private. With this statement she readily acquiesced, and told me
that she had no desire for any further information than I found it expedient
to give.</p>
<p>My first productions were of the poetical kind. After having finished two
or three, I directed this generous creature to take them to the office of a
newspaper; but they were rejected with contempt by the Aristarchus of that
place, who, having bestowed on them a superficial glance, told her that such
matters were not in his way. I cannot help mentioning in this place, that
the countenance of Mrs. Marney (this was the name of my ambassadress) was in
all cases a perfect indication of her success, and rendered explanation by
words wholly unnecessary. She interested herself so unreservedly in what she
undertook, that she felt either miscarriage or good fortune much more
exquisitely than I did. I had an unhesitating confidence in my own
resources, and, occupied as I was in meditations more interesting and more
painful, I regarded these matters as altogether trivial.</p>
<p>I quietly took the pieces back, and laid them upon my table. Upon
revisal, I altered and transcribed one of them, and, joining it with two
others, despatched them together to the editor of a magazine. He desired
they might be left with him till the day after to-morrow. When that day came
he told my friend they should be inserted; but, Mrs. Marney asking
respecting the price, he replied, it was their constant rule to give nothing
for poetical compositions, the letter-box being always full of writings of
that sort; but if the gentleman would try his hand in prose, a short essay
or a tale, he would see what he could do for him.</p>
<p>With the requisition of my literary dictator I immediately complied. I
attempted a paper in the style of Addison's Spectators, which was accepted.
In a short time I was upon an established footing in this quarter. I however
distrusted my resources in the way of moral disquisition, and soon turned my
thoughts to his other suggestion, a tale. His demands upon me were now
frequent, and, to facilitate my labours, I bethought myself of the resource
of translation. I had scarcely any convenience with respect to the procuring
of books; but, as my memory was retentive, I frequently translated or
modelled my narrative upon a reading of some years before. By a fatality,
for which I did not exactly know how to account, my thoughts frequently led
me to the histories of celebrated robbers; and I related, from time to time,
incidents and anecdotes of Cartouche, Gusman d'Alfarache, and other
memorable worthies, whose career was terminated upon the gallows or the
scaffold.</p>
<p>In the mean time a retrospect to my own situation rendered a perseverance
even in this industry difficult to be maintained. I often threw down my pen
in an ecstasy of despair. Sometimes for whole days together I was incapable
of action, and sunk into a sort of partial stupor, too wretched to be
described. Youth and health however enabled me, from time to time, to get
the better of my dejection, and to rouse myself to something like a gaiety,
which, if it had been permanent, might have made this interval of my story
tolerable to my reflections.</p>
<hr />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />