<h2>LECTURE XXXIV - MRS. CAUDLE, SUSPECTING THAT MR. CAUDLE HAS MADE HIS WILL, IS “ONLY ANXIOUS, AS A WIFE,” TO KNOW ITS PROVISIONS</h2>
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<p>“There, I always said you’d a strong mind when you liked,
Caudle; and what you’ve just been doing proves it. Some
people won’t make a will, because they think they must die directly
afterwards. Now, you’re above that, love, aren’t you?
Nonsense; you know very well what I mean. I know your will’s
made, for Scratcherly told me so. What?</p>
<p>“<i>You don’t believe it</i>?</p>
<p>“Well, I’m sure! That’s a pretty thing for
a man to say to his wife. I know he’s too much of a man
of business to talk; but I suppose there’s a way of telling things
without speaking them. And when I put the question to him, lawyer
as he is, he hadn’t the face to deny it.</p>
<p>“To be sure, it can be of no consequence to me whether your
will is made or not. I shall not be alive, Mr. Caudle, to want
anything: I shall be provided for a long time before your will’s
of any use. No, Mr. Caudle, I sha’n’t survive you:
and - though a woman’s wrong to let her affection for a man be
known, for then she’s always taken advantage of - though I know
it’s foolish and weak to say so, still I don’t want to survive
you. How should I? No, no; don’t say that: I’m
not good for a hundred - I sha’n’t see you out, and another
husband too. What a gross idea, Caudle! To imagine I’d
ever think of marrying again. No - never! What?</p>
<p>“<i>That’s what we all say</i>?</p>
<p>“Not at all; quite the reverse. To me the very idea of
such a thing is horrible, and always was. Yes, I know very well
that some do marry again - but what they’re made of I’m
sure I can’t tell. Ugh!</p>
<p>“There are men, I know, who leave their property in such a
way that their widows, to hold it, must keep widows. Now, if there
is anything in the world that is mean and small, it is that. Don’t
you think so, too, Caudle? Why don’t you speak, love?
That’s so like you! I never want a little quiet, rational
talk, but you want to go to sleep. But you never were like any
other man! What?</p>
<p>“<i>How do I know</i>?</p>
<p>“There now - that’s so like your aggravating way.
I never open my lips upon a subject but you try to put me off.
I’ve no doubt when Miss Prettyman speaks, you can answer <i>her</i>
properly enough. There you are, again! Upon my life, it
<i>is</i> odd; but I never can in the most innocent way mention that
person’s name that -</p>
<p>“<i>Why can’t I leave her alone</i>?</p>
<p>“I’m sure - with all my heart! Who wants to talk
about her? I don’t: only you always will say something that’s
certain to bring up her name.</p>
<p>“What was I saying, Caudle? Oh, about the way some men
bind their widows. To my mind, there is nothing so little.
When a man forbids his wife to marry again without losing what he leaves
- it’s what I call selfishness after death. Mean to a degree!
It’s like taking his wife into the grave with him. Eh?</p>
<p>“<i>You never want to do that</i>?</p>
<p>“No, I’m sure of that, love: you’re not the man
to tie a woman up in that mean manner. A man who’d do that
would have his widow burnt with him, if he could - just as those monsters,
that call themselves men, do in the Indies.</p>
<p>“However, it’s no matter to me how you’ve made
your will; but it may be to your second wife. What?</p>
<p>“<i>I shall never give you a chance</i>?</p>
<p>“Ha! you don’t know my constitution after all, Caudle.
I’m not at all the woman I was. I say nothing about ’em,
but very often you don’t know my feelings. And as we’re
on the subject, dearest, I have only one favour to ask. When you
marry again - now it’s no use your saying that. After the
comforts you’ve known of marriage - what are you sighing at, dear?
- after the comforts, you must marry again - now don’t forswear
yourself in that violent way, taking an oath that you know you must
break - you couldn’t help it, I’m sure of it; and I know
you better than you know yourself. Well, all I ask is, love, because
it’s only for your sake, and it would make no difference to me
then - how should it? - but all I ask is, don’t marry Miss Pret
- There! there! I’ve done: I won’t say another word
about it; but all I ask is, don’t. After the way you’ve
been thought of, and after the comforts you’ve been used to, Caudle,
she wouldn’t be the wife for you. Of course I could then
have no interest in the matter - you might marry the Queen of England,
for what it would be to me then - I’m only anxious about you.
Mind, Caudle, I’m not saying anything against her; not at all;
but there’s a flightiness in her manner - I dare say, poor thing,
she means no harm, and it may be, as the saying is, only her manner
after all - still, there is a flightiness about her that, after what
you’ve been used to, would make you very wretched. Now,
if I may boast of anything, Caudle, it is my propriety of manner the
whole of my life. I know that wives who’re very particular
aren’t thought as well of as those who’re not - still, it’s
next to nothing to be virtuous, if people don’t seem so.
And virtue, Caudle - no, I’m not going to preach about virtue,
for I never do. No; and I don’t go about with my virtue,
like a child with a drum, making all sorts of noises with it.
But I know your principles. I shall never forget what I once heard
you say to Prettyman: and it’s no excuse that you’d taken
so much wine you didn’t know what you were saying at the time;
for wine brings out man’s wickedness, just as fire brings out
spots of grease.</p>
<p>“<i>What did you say</i>?</p>
<p>“Why, you said this: - ‘Virtue’s a beautiful thing
in women, when they don’t make so much noise about it: but there’s
some women who think virtue was given ’em, as claws were given
to cats’ - yes, cats was the word - ‘to do nothing but scratch
with.’ That’s what you said.</p>
<p>“<i>You don’t recollect a syllable of it</i>?</p>
<p>“No, that’s it; when you’re in that dreadful state,
you recollect nothing: but it’s a good thing I do.</p>
<p>“But we won’t talk of that, love - that’s all over:
I dare say you meant nothing. But I’m glad you agree with
me, that the man who’d tie up his widow not to marry again, is
a mean man. It makes me happy that you’ve the confidence
in me to say that.</p>
<p>“<i>You never said it</i>?</p>
<p>“That’s nothing to do with it - you’ve just as
good as said it. No: when a man leaves all his property to his
wife, without binding her hands from marrying again, he shows what a
dependence he has upon her love. He proves to all the world what
a wife she’s been to him; and how, after his death, he knows she’ll
grieve for him. And then, of course, a second marriage never enters
her head. But when she only keeps his money so long as she keeps
a widow, why, she’s aggravated to take another husband.
I’m sure of it; many a poor woman has been driven into wedlock
again, only because she was spited into it by her husband’s will.
It’s only natural to suppose it. If I thought, Caudle, you
could do such a thing, though it would break my heart to do it, - yet,
though you were dead and gone, I’d show you I’d a spirit,
and marry again directly. Not but what it’s ridiculous my
talking in such a way, as I shall go long before you; still, mark my
words, and don’t provoke me with any will of that sort, or I’d
do it - as I’m a living woman in this bed to-night, I’d
do it.”</p>
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<p>“<i>I did not contradict her</i>,” says Caudle, “<i>but
suffered her to slumber in such assurance</i>.”</p>
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