Chapter 31

Would seem incongruous as a singing tree:

Trees have their music, but the birds they shield -

The pleasing tribute for protection yield;

Each ample tree the tuneful choir defends,

As this rich merchant cheers his happy friends!”

In the same town it was his chance to meet

A gentle Lady, with a mind discreet;

Neither in life’s decline, nor bloom of youth,

One famed for maiden modesty and truth:

By nature cool, in pious habits bred,

She look’d on lovers with a virgin’s dread:

Deceivers, rakes, and libertines were they,

And harmless beauty their pursuit and prey;

As bad as giants in the ancient times

Were modern lovers, and the same their crimes:

Soon as she heard of her all-conquering charms,

At once she fled to her defensive arms;

Conn’d o’er the tales her maiden aunt had told,

And, statue like, was motionless and cold:

From prayer of love, like that Pygmalion pray’d,

Ere the hard stone became the yielding maid,

A different change in this chaste nymph ensued,

And turn’d to stone the breathing flesh and blood:

Whatever youth described his wounded heart,

“He came to rob her, and she scorn’d his art;

And who of raptures once presumed to speak,

Told listening maids he thought them fond and weak;

But should a worthy man his hopes display

In few plain words, and beg a yes or nay,

He would deserve an answer just and plain,

Since adulation only moved disdain -

Sir, if my friends object not, come again.”

Hence, our grave Lover, though he liked the face,

Praised not a feature - dwelt not on a grace;

But in the simplest terms declared his state:

“A widow’d man, who wish’d a virtuous mate;

Who fear’d neglect, and was compell’d to trust

Dependants wasteful, idle, or unjust;

Or should they not the trusted stores destroy,

At best, they could not help him to enjoy;

But with her person and her prudence bless’d,

His acts would prosper, and his soul have rest:

Would she be his?” - “Why, that was much to say;

She would consider; he awhile might stay:

She liked his manners, and believed his word;

He did not flatter, flattery she abhorr’d:

It was her happy lot in peace to dwell -

Would change make better what was now so well?

But she would ponder.”  “This,” he said, “was kind;”

And begg’d to know “when she had fix’d her mind.

Romantic maidens would have scorn’d the air,

And the cool prudence of a mind so fair;

But well it pleased this wiser maid to find

Her own mild virtues in her lover’s mind.

His worldly wealth she sought, and quickly grew

Pleased with her search, and happy in the view

Of vessels freighted with abundant stores,

Of rooms whose treasures press’d the groaning floors;

And he of clerks and servants could display

A little army on a public day:

Was this a man like needy bard to speak

Of balmy lip, bright eye, or rosy cheek?

The sum appointed for her widow’d state,

Fix’d by her friend, excited no debate;

Then the kind lady gave her hand and heart,

And, never finding, never dealt with art:

In his engagements she had no concern;

He taught her not, nor had she wish to learn;

On him in all occasions she relied,

His word her surety, and his worth her pride.

When ship was launch’d, and merchant Paul had share,

A bounteous feast became the lady’s care;

Who then her entry to the dinner made,

In costly raiment, and with kind parade.

Call’d by this duty on a certain day,

And robed to grace it in a rich array,

Forth from her room, with measured step she came,

Proud of th’ event, and stately look’d the dame;

The husband met her at his study door -

“This way, my love - one moment, and no more:

A trifling business - you will understand -

The law requires that you affix your hand;

But first attend, and you shall learn the cause

Why forms like these have been prescribed by laws.”

Then from his chair a man in black arose,

And with much quickness hurried off his prose -

That “Ellen Paul, the wife, and so forth, freed

From all control, her own the act and deed,

And forasmuch” - said she, “I’ve no distrust,

For he that asks it is discreet and just;

Our friends are waiting - where am I to sign? -

There? - Now be ready when we meet to dine.”

This said, she hurried off in great delight,

The ship was launch’d, and joyful was the night.

Now, says the reader, and in much disdain,

This serious Merchant was a rogue in grain;

A treacherous wretch, an artful sober knave,

And ten times worse for manners cool and grave:

And she devoid of sense, to set her hand

To scoundrel deeds she could not understand.

Alas! ’tis true; and I in vain had tried

To soften crime that cannot be denied;

And might have labour’d many a tedious verse

The latent cause of mischief to rehearse:

Be it confess’d, that long, with troubled look,

This Trader view’d a huge accompting-book;

(His former marriage for a time delay’d

The dreaded hour, the present lent its aid;)

But he too clearly saw the evil day,

And put the terror, by deceit, away;

Thus, by connecting with his sorrows crime,

He gain’d a portion of uneasy time. -

All this too late the injur’d Lady saw:

What law had given, again she gave to law;

His guilt, her folly - these at once impress’d

Their lasting feelings on her guileless breast.

“Shame I can bear,” she cried, “and want sustain,

But will not see this guilty wretch again:”

For all was lost, and he with many a tear

Confess’d the fault - she turning scorn’d to hear.

To legal claims he yielded all his worth.

But small the portion, and the wrong’d were wroth,

Nor to their debtor would a part allow;

And where to live he know not - knew not how.

The Wife a cottage found, and thither went

The suppliant man, but she would not relent:

Thenceforth she utter’d with indignant tone,

“I feel the misery, and will feel alone.”

He would turn servant for her sake, would keep

The poorest school, the very streets would sweep,

To show his love.  “It was already shown,

And her affliction should be all her own:

His wants and weakness might have touch’d her heart,

But from his meanness she resolved to part.”

In a small alley was she lodged, beside

Its humblest poor, and at the view she cried,

“Welcome! yes! let me welcome, if I can,

The fortune dealt me by this cruel man:

Welcome this low-thatch’d roof, this shatter’d door,

These walls of clay, this miserable floor;

Welcome my envied neighbours; this to you

Is all familiar - all to me is new:

You have no hatred to the loathsome meal,

Your firmer nerves no trembling terrors feel,

Nor, what you must expose, desire you to conceal;

What your coarse feelings bear without offence,

Disgusts my taste and poisons every sense:

Daily shall I your sad relations hear

Of wanton women and of men severe;

There will dire curses, dreadful oaths abound,

And vile expressions shock me and confound:

Noise of dull wheels, and songs with horrid words,

Will be the music that this lane affords;

Mirth that disgusts, and quarrels that degrade

The human mind, must my retreat invade:

Hard is my fate! yet easier to sustain,

Than to abide with guilt and fraud again;

A grave impostor! who expects to meet,

In such gray locks and gravity, deceit?

Where the sea rages and the billows roar,

Men know the danger, and they quit the shore;

But, be there nothing in the way descried,

When o’er the rocks smooth runs the wicked tide -

Sinking unwarn’d, they execrate the shock

And the dread peril of the sunken rock.”

A frowning world had now the man to dread,

Taught in no arts, to no profession bred;

Pining in grief, beset with constant care

Wandering he went, to rest he knew not where.

Meantime the Wife - but she abjured the name -

Endured her lot, and struggled with the shame;

When, lo! an uncle on the mother’s side,

In nature something, as in blood allied,

Admired her firmness, his protection gave,

And show’d a kindness she disdain’d to crave.

Frugal and rich the man, and frugal grew

The sister-mind without a selfish view;

And further still - the temp’rate pair agreed

With what they saved the patient poor to feed:

His whole estate, when to the grave consign’d,

Left the good kinsman to the kindred mind;

Assured that law, with spell secure and tight,

Had fix’d it as her own peculiar right.

Now to her ancient residence removed,

She lived as widow, well endowed and loved;

Decent her table was, and to her door

Came daily welcomed the neglected poor:

The absent sick were soothed by her relief,

As her free bounty sought the haunts of grief;

A plain and homely charity had she,

And loved the objects of her alms to see;

With her own hands she dress’d the savoury meat,

With her own fingers wrote the choice receipt;

She heard all tales that injured wives relate,

And took a double interest in their fate;

But of all husbands not a wretch was known

So vile, so mean, so cruel as her own.

This bounteous Lady kept an active spy,

To search th’ abodes of want, and to supply;

The gentle Susan served the liberal dame -

Unlike their notions, yet their deeds the same:

No practised villain could a victim find

Than this stern Lady more completely blind;

Nor (if detected in his fraud) could meet

One less disposed to pardon a deceit;

The wrong she treasured, and on no pretence

Received th’ offender, or forgot th’ offence:

But the kind Servant, to the thrice-proved knave

A fourth time listen’d and the past forgave.

First in her youth, when she was blithe and gay;

Came a smooth rogue, and stole her love away:

Then to another and another flew,

To boast the wanton mischief he could do:

Yet she forgave him, though so great her pain,

That she was never blithe or gay again.

Then came a spoiler, who, with villain-art

Implored her hand, and agonized her heart;

He seized her purse, in idle waste to spend

With a vile wanton, whom she call’d her friend;

Five years she suffer’d - he had revell’d five -

Then came to show her he was just alive;

Alone he came, his vile companion dead,

And he, a wand’ring pauper, wanting bread;

His body wasted, wither’d life and limb,

When this kind soul became a slave to him:

Nay, she was sure that, should he now survive,

No better husband would be left alive:

For him she mourn’d, and then, alone and poor,

Sought and found comfort at her Lady’s door:

Ten years she served, and mercy her employ,

Her tasks were pleasure, and her duty joy.

Thus lived the Mistress and the Maid, design’d

Each other’s aid - one cautious, and both kind:

Oft at their window, working, they would sigh

To see the aged and the sick go by;

Like wounded bees, that at their home arrive

Slowly and weak, but labouring for the hive.

The busy people of a mason’s yard

The curious Lady view’d with much regard;

With steady motion she perceived them draw

Through blocks of stone the slowly-working saw;

It gave her pleasure and surprise to see

Among these men the signs of revelry:

Cold was the season, and confined their view,

Tedious their tasks, but merry were the crew;

There she beheld an aged pauper wait,

Patient and still, to take an humble freight;

Within the panniers on an ass he laid

The ponderous grit, and for the portion paid;

This he re-sold, and, with each trifling gift,

Made shift to live, and wretched was the shift.

Now will it be by every reader told

Who was this humble trader, poor and old. -

In vain an author would a name suppress,

From the least hint a reader learns to guess;

Of children lost, our novels sometimes treat,

We never care - assured again to meet:

In vain the writer for concealment tries,

We trace his purpose under all disguise;

Nay, though he tells us they are dead and gone,

Of whom we wot, they will appear anon;

Our favourites fight, are wounded, hopeless lie,

Survive they cannot - nay, they cannot die;


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