AÂ CÂ TÂ Â IÂ I.SCENE I.Sir George Touchwood's.EnterDoricourtandSir George.Doricourt.
AÂ CÂ TÂ Â IÂ I.SCENE I.Sir George Touchwood's.EnterDoricourtandSir George.Doricourt.
Married, ha! ha! ha! you, whom I heard in Paris say such things of the sex, are in London a married man.
Sir Geo.The sex is still what it has ever been sincela petite moralebanished substantial virtues; and rather than have given my name to one of your high-bred fashionable dames, I'd have crossed the line in a fire-ship, and married a Japanese.
Doric.Yet you have married an English beauty, yea, and a beauty born in high life.
Sir Geo.True; but she has a simplicity of heart and manners, that would have become the fair Hebrew damsels toasted by the Patriarchs.
Doric.Ha! ha! Why, thou art a downright matrimonial Quixote. My life on't, she becomes as mere a Town Lady in six months as though she had been bred to the trade.
Sir Geo.Common—common—(contemptuously). No, Sir, Lady Frances despises high life so much from the ideas I have given her, that she'll live in it like a salamander in fire.
Doric.Oh, that the circledans la place Victoirecould witness thy extravagance! I'll send thee off to St. Evreux this night, drawn at full length, and coloured after nature.
Sir Geo.Tell him then, to add to the ridicule, that Touchwood glories in the name of Husband; that he has found in one Englishwoman more beauty than Frenchmen ever saw, and more goodness than Frenchwomen can conceive.
Doric.Well—enough of description. Introduce me to this phœnix; I came on purpose.
Sir Geo.Introduce!—oh, aye, to be sure—I believe Lady Frances is engaged just now—but another time. How handsome the dog looks to-day!Aside.
Doric.Another time!—but I have no other time. 'Sdeath! this is the only hour I can command this fortnight!
Sir Geo.[Aside.I am glad to hear it, with all my soul.] So then, you can't dine with us to-day? That's very unlucky.
Doric.Oh, yes—as to dinner—yes, I can, I believe, contrive to dine with you to-day.
Sir Geo.Psha! I didn't think on what I was saying; I meant supper.—You can't sup with us?
Doric.Why, supper will be rather more convenient than dinner.—But you are fortunate—if you had ask'd me any other night, I could not have come.
Sir Geo.To-night!—Gad, now I recollect, we are particularly engaged to-night.—But to-morrow night—
Doric.Why look ye, Sir George, 'tis very plain you have no inclination to let me see your wife at all; so here I sit (throws himself on a sopha.)—There's my hat, and here are my legs.—Now I sha'n't stir till I have seen her; and I have no engagements: I'll breakfast, dine, and sup with you every day this week.
Sir Geo.Was there ever such a provoking wretch! But, to be plain with you, Doricourt, I and my house are at your service: but you are a damn'd agreeable fellow, and ten years younger than I am; and the women, I observe, always simper when you appear. For these reasons, I had rather, when Lady Frances and I are together, that you should forget we are acquainted, further than a nod, a smile, or a how-d'ye.
Doric.Very well.
Sir Geo.It is not merely yourself inpropriâ personâthat I object to; but, if you are intimate here, you'll make my house still more the fashion than it is; and it is already so much so, that my doors are of no use to me. I married Lady Frances to engross her to myself; yet such is the blessed freedom of modern manners, that, in spite of me, her eyes, thoughts, and conversation, are continually divided amongst all the Flirts and Coxcombs of Fashion.
Doric.To be sure, I confess that kind of freedom is carried rather too far. 'Tis hard one can't have a jewel in one's cabinet, but the whole town must be gratified with its lustre. He sha'n't preach me out of seeing his wife, though.Aside.
Sir Geo.Well, now, that's reasonable. When you take time to reflect, Doricourt, I always observe you decide right, and therefore I hope——
Enter Servant.
Enter Servant.
Serv.Sir, my Lady desires——
Sir Geo.I am particularly engaged.
Doric.Oh, Lord, that shall be no excuse in the world (leaping from the sopha). Lead the way, John.—I'll attend your Lady.
[Exit, following the Servant.
Sir Geo.What devil possessed me to talk about her!—Here, Doricourt! (Running after him.) Doricourt!
EnterMrs. Racket,andMiss Ogle,followed by a Servant.
EnterMrs. Racket,andMiss Ogle,followed by a Servant.
Mrs. Rack.Acquaint your Lady, that Mrs. Racket, and Miss Ogle, are here.
[ExitServant.
Miss Ogle.I shall hardly know Lady Frances, 'tis so long since I was in Shropshire.
Mrs. Rack.And I'll be sworn you never saw heroutof Shropshire.—Her father kept her locked up with his Caterpillars and Shells; and loved her beyond any thing—but a blue Butterfly, and a petrified Frog!
Miss Ogle.Ha! ha! ha!—Well, 'twas a cheap way of breeding her:—you know he was very poor, though a Lord; and very high-spirited, though a Virtuoso.—In town, her Pantheons, Operas, and Robes de Cour, would have swallowed his Sea-Weeds, Moths, and Monsters, in six weeks!—Sir George, I find, thinks his Wife a most extraordinary creature: he has taught her to despise every thing like Fashionable Life, and boasts that example will have no effect on her.
Mrs. Rack.There's a great degree of impertinence in all that—I'll try to make her a Fine Lady, to humble him.
Miss Ogle.That's just the thing I wish.
Enter LadyFrances.
Enter LadyFrances.
Lady Fran.I beg ten thousand pardons, my dear Mrs. Racket.—Miss Ogle, I rejoice to see you: I should have come to you sooner, but I was detained in conversation by Mr. Doricourt.
Mrs. Rack.Pray make no apology; I am quite happy that we have your Ladyship in town at last.—What stay do you make?
Lady Fran.A short one! Sir George talks with regret of the scenes we have left; and as the ceremony of presentation is over, will, I believe, soon return.
Miss Ogle.Sure he can't be so cruel! Does your Ladyship wish to return so soon?
Lady Fran.I have not the habit of consulting my own wishes; but, I think, if they decide, we shall not return immediately. I have yet hardly form'd an idea of London.
Mrs. Rack.I shall quarrel with your Lord and Master, if he dares think of depriving us of you so soon. How do you dispose of yourself to-day?
Lady Fran.Sir George is going with me this morning to the mercer's, to chuse a silk; and then——
Mrs. Rack.Chuse a silk for you! ha! ha! ha! Sir George chuses your laces too, I hope; your gloves, and your pincushions!
Lady Fran.Madam!
Mrs. Rack.I am glad to see you blush, my dear Lady Frances. These are strange homespun ways! If you do these things, pray keep 'em secret. Lord bless us! If the Town should know your husband chuses your gowns!
Miss Ogle.You are very young, my Lady, and have been brought up in solitude. The maxims you learnt among the Wood-Nymphs in Shropshire, won't pass current here, I assure you.
Mrs. Rack.Why, my dear creature, you look quite frighten'd!—Come, you shall go with us to an Exhibition, and an Auction.—Afterwards, we'll take a turn in the Park, and then drive to Kensington;—so we shall be at home by four, to dress; and in the evening I'll attend you to Lady Brilliant's masquerade.
Lady Fran.I shall be very happy to be of your party, if Sir George has no engagements.
Mrs. Rack.What! Do you stand so low in your own opinion, that you dare not trust yourself without Sir George! If you chuse to play Darby and Joan, my dear, you should have stay'd in the country;—'tis an Exhibition not calculated for London, I assure you!
Miss Ogle.What I suppose, my Lady, you and Sir George, will be seen pacing it comfortably round the Canal, arm and arm, and then go lovingly into the same carriage;—dinetête-à -tête, spend the evening at Picquet, and so go soberly to bed at Eleven!—Such a snug plan may do for an Attorney and his Wife; but, for Lady Frances Touchwood, 'tis as unsuitable as linsey-woolsey, or a black bonnet at theFestino!
Lady Fran.These are rather new doctrines to me!—But, my dear Mrs. Racket, you and Miss Ogle must judge of these things better than I can. As you observe, I am but young, and may have caught absurd opinions.—Here is Sir George!
Enter SirGeorge.
Enter SirGeorge.
Sir Geo.(Aside.) 'Sdeath! another room full!
Lady Fran.My love! Mrs. Racket, and Miss Ogle.
Mrs. Rack.Give you joy, Sir George.—We came to rob you of Lady Frances for a few hours.
Sir Geo.A few hours!
Lady Fran.Oh, yes! I am going to an Exhibition, and an Auction, and the Park, and Kensington, and a thousand places!—It is quite ridiculous, I find, for married people to be always together—We shall be laughed at!
Sir Geo.I am astonished!—Mrs. Racket, what does the dear creature mean?
Mrs. Rack.Mean, Sir George!—what she says, I imagine.
Miss Ogle.Why, you know, Sir, as Lady Frances had the misfortune to be bred entirely in the Country, she cannot be supposed to be versed in Fashionable Life.
Sir Geo.No; heaven forbid she should!—If she had, Madam, she would never have been my Wife!
Mrs. Rack.Are you serious?
Sir Geo.Perfectly so.—I should never have had the courage to have married a well-bred Fine Lady.
Miss Ogle.Pray, Sir, what do you take a Fine Lady to be, that you express such fear of her? (sneeringly.)
Sir Geo.A being easily described, Madam, as she is seen every where, but in her own house. She sleeps at home, but she lives all over the town. In her mind, every sentiment gives place to the Lust of Conquest, and the vanity of being particular. The feelings of Wife, and Mother, are lost in the whirl of dissipation. If she continues virtuous, 'tis by chance—and if she preserves her Husband from ruin, 'tis by her dexterity at the Card-Table!—Such a Woman I take to be a perfect Fine Lady!
Mrs. Rack.And you I take to be a slanderous Cynic of two-and-thirty.—Twenty years hence, one might have forgiven such a libel!—Now, Sir, hear my definition of a Fine Lady:—She is a creature for whom Nature has done much, and Education more; she has Taste, Elegance, Spirit, Understanding. In her manner she is free, in her morals nice. Her behaviour is undistinguishingly polite to her Husband, and all mankind;—her sentiments are for their hours of retirement. In a word, a Fine Lady is the life of conversation, the spirit of society, the joy of the public!—Pleasure follows where ever she appears, and the kindest wishes attend her slumbers.—Make haste, then, my dear Lady Frances, commence Fine Lady, and force your Husband to acknowledge the justness of my picture!
Lady Fran.I am sure 'tis a delightful one. How can you dislike it, Sir George? You painted Fashionable Life in colours so disgusting, that I thought I hated it; but, on a nearer view, it seems charming. I have hitherto lived in obscurity; 'tis time that I should be a Woman of the World. I long to begin;—my heart pants with expectation and delight!
Mrs. Rack.Come, then; let us begin directly. I am inpatient to introduce you to that Society, which you were born to ornament and charm.
Lady Fran.Adieu! my Love!—We shall meet again at dinner. (Going.)
Sir Geo.Sure, I am in a dream!—Fanny!
Lady Fran.(returning) Sir George?
Sir Geo.Will you go without me?
Mrs. Rack.Will you go without me!—ha! ha! ha! what a pathetic address! Why, sure you would not always be seen side by side, like two beans upon a stalk. Are you afraid to trust Lady Frances with me, Sir?
Sir George.Heaven and earth! with whom can a man trust his wife, in the present state of society? Formerly there were distinctions of character amongst ye: every class of females had its particular description; Grandmothers were pious, Aunts, discreet, Old Maids censorious! but now aunts, grandmothers, girls, and maiden gentlewomen, are all the same creature;—a wrinkle more or less is the sole difference between ye.
Mrs. Rack.That Maiden Gentlewomen have lost their censoriousness, is surely not in your catalogue of grievances.
Sir Geo.Indeed it is—and ranked amongst the most serious grievances.—Things went well, Madam, when the tongues of three or four old Virgins kept all the Wives and Daughters of a parish in awe. They were the Dragons that guarded the Hesperian fruit; and I wonder they have not been oblig'd, by act of parliament, to resume their function.
Mrs. Rack.Ha! ha! ha! and pension'd, I suppose, for making strict enquiries into the lives and conversations of their neighbours.
Sir Geo.With all my heart, and impowered to oblige every woman to conform her conduct to her real situation. You, for instance, are a Widow: your air should be sedate, your dress grave, your deportment matronly, and in all things an example to the young women growing up about you!—instead of which, you are dress'd for conquest, think of nothing but ensnaring hearts; are a Coquette, a Wit, and a Fine Lady.
Mrs. Rack.Bear witness to what he says! A Coquette! a Wit! and a Fine Lady! Who would have expected an eulogy from such an ill-natur'd mortal!—Valour to a Soldier, Wisdom to a Judge, or glory to a Prince, is not more than such a character to a Woman.
Miss Ogle.Sir George, I see, languishes for the charming society of a century and a half ago; when a grave 'Squire, and a still graver Dame, surrounded by a sober family, form'd a stiff groupe in a mouldy old house in the corner of a Park.
Mrs. Rack.Delightful serenity! Undisturb'd by any noise but the cawing of rooks, and the quarterly rumbling of an old family-coach on a state-visit; with the happy intervention of a friendly call from the Parish Apothecary, or the Curate's Wife.
Sir Geo.And what is the society of which you boast?—a meer chaos, in which all distinction of rank is lost in a ridiculous affectation of ease, and every different order of beings huddled together, as they were before the creation. In the sameselect party, you will often find the wife of a Bishop and a Sharper, of an Earl and a Fidler. In short, 'tis one universal masquerade, all disguised in the same habits and manners.
Serv.Mr. Flutter.
[ExitServant.
Sir Geo.Here comes an illustration. Now I defy you to tell from his appearance, whether Flutter is a Privy Counsellor or a Mercer, a Lawyer, or a Grocer's 'Prentice.
EnterFlutter.
EnterFlutter.
Flut.Oh, just which you please, Sir George; so you don't make me a Lord Mayor. Ah, Mrs. Racket!——Lady Frances, your most obedient; you look—now hang me, if that's not provoking!—had your gown been of another colour, I would have said the prettiest thing you ever heard in your life.
Miss Ogle.Pray give it us.
Flut.I was yesterday at Mrs. Bloomer's. She was dress'd all in green; no other colour to be seen but that of her face and bosom. So says I, My dear Mrs. Bloomer! you look like a Carnation, just bursting from its pod.
Sir Geo.And what said her Husband?
Flut.Her Husband! Why, her Husband laugh'd, and said a Cucumber would have been a happier simile.
Sir Geo.But thereareHusbands, Sir, who would rather have corrected than amended your comparison; I, for instance, should consider a man's complimenting my Wife as an impertinence.
Flut.Why, what harm can there be in compliments? Sure they are not infectious; and, if they were, you, Sir George, of all people breathing, have reason to be satisfied about your Lady's attachment; every body talks of it: that little Bird there, that she killed out of jealousy, the most extraordinary instance of affection, that ever was given.
Lady Fran.I kill a Bird through jealousy!—Heavens! Mr. Flutter, how can you impute such a cruelty to me?
Sir Geo.I could have forgiven you, if you had.
Flut.Oh, what a blundering Fool!—No, no—now I remember—'twas your Bird, Lady Frances—that's it; your Bullfinch, which Sir George, in one of the refinements of his passion, sent into the wide world to seek its fortune.—He took it for a Knight in disguise.
Lady Fran.Is it possible! O, Sir George, could I have imagin'd it was you who depriv'd me of a creature I was so fond of?
Sir Geo.Mr. Flutter, you are one of those busy, idle, meddling people, who, from mere vacuity of mind, are, the most dangerous inmates in a family. You have neither feelings nor opinions of your own; but, like a glass in a tavern, bear about those of every Blockhead, who gives you his;—and, because youmeanno harm, think yourselves excus'd, though broken friendships, discords, and murders, are the consequences of your indiscretions.
Flut.(taking out his Tablets) Vacuity of Mind!—What was the next? I'll write down this sermon; 'tis the first I have heard since my Grandmother's funeral.
Miss Ogle.Come, Lady Frances, you see what a cruel creature your loving Husband can be; so let us leave him.
Sir Geo.Madam, Lady Frances shall not go.
Lady Fran. Shallnot, Sir George?—This is the first time such an expression—(weeping)
Sir Geo.My love! my life!
Lady Fran.Don't imagine I'll be treated like a Child! denied what I wish, and then pacified with sweet words.
Miss Ogle(apart). The Bullfinch! that's an excellent subject; never let it down.
Lady Fran.I see plainly you would deprive me of every pleasure, as well as of my sweet Bird—out of pure love!—Barbarous Man!
Sir Geo.'Tis well, Madam;—your resentment of that circumstance proves to me, what I did not before suspect, that you are deficient both in tenderness and understanding.—Tremble to think the hour approaches, in which you would give worlds for such a proof of my love. Go, Madam, give yourself to the Public; abandon your heart to dissipation, and see if, in the scenes of gaiety and folly that await you, you can find a recompence for the lost affection of a doating Husband.
[ExitSir George.
Flut.Lord! what a fine thing it is to have the gift of Speech! I suppose Sir George practises at Coachmakers-hall, or the Black-horse in Bond-street.
Lady Fran.He is really angry; I cannot go.
Mrs. Rack.Not go! Foolish Creature! you are arrived at the moment, which some time or other was sure to happen; and everything depends on the use you make of it.
Miss Ogle.Come, Lady Frances! don't hesitate!—the minutes are precious.
Lady Fran.I could find in my heart!—and yet I won't give up neither.—If I should in this instance, he'll expect it for ever.
[Exeunt LadyFrances,and Mrs.Racket.
Miss Ogle.Now you act like a Woman of Spirit.
[Exeunt MissOgle,and Mrs.Racket.
Flut.A fair tug, by Jupiter—between Duty and Pleasure!—Pleasure beats, and off we go,Iö! triumphe
[ExitFlutter.
Scene changes to an Auction Room.—Busts, Pictures, &c. &c.EnterSilvertonguewith three Puffers.
Scene changes to an Auction Room.—Busts, Pictures, &c. &c.EnterSilvertonguewith three Puffers.
Silv.Very well,—very well.—This morning will be devoted to curiosity; my sale begins to-morrow at eleven. But, Mrs. Fagg, if you do no better than you did in Lord Fillagree's sale, I shall discharge you.—You want a knack terribly: and this dress—why, nobody can mistake you for a Gentlewoman.
Fag.Very true, Mr. Silvertongue; but I can't dress like a Lady upon Half-a-crown a day, as the saying is.—If you want me to dress like a Lady, you must double my pay.——Double or quits, Mr. Silvertongue.
Silv.——Five Shillingsa day! what a demand! Why, Woman, there are a thousand Parsons in the town, who don't make Five Shillings a day; though they preach, pray, christen, marry, and bury, for the Good of the Community.—Five Shillings a day!—why, 'tis the pay of a Lieutenant in a marching Regiment, who keeps a Servant, a Mistress, a Horse; fights, dresses, ogles, makes love, and dies upon Five Shillings a day.
Fag.Oh, as to that, all that's very right. A Soldier should not be too fond of life; and forcing him to do all these things upon Five Shillings a day, is the readiest way to make him tir'd on't.
Silv.Well, Mask, have you been looking into the Antiquaries?—have you got all the terms of art in a string—aye?
Mask.Yes, I have: I know the Age of a Coin by the taste; and can fix the Birth-day of a Medal,Anno MundiorAnno Domini, though the green rust should have eaten up every character. But you know, the brown suit and the wig I wear when I personate the Antiquary, are in Limbo.
Silv.Those you have on, may do.
Mask.These!—Why, in these I am a young travell'dCognoscento: Mr. Glib bought them of Sir Tom Totter's Valet; and I am going there directly. You know his Picture-Sale comes on to-day; and I have got my head full of Parmegiano, Sal Rosa, Metzu, Tarbaek, and Vandermeer. I talk of the relief of Woovermans, the spirit of Teniers, the colouring of the Venetian School, and the correctness of the Roman. I distinguish Claude by his Sleep, and Ruysdael by his Water. The rapidity of Tintoret's pencil strikes me at the first glance; whilst the harmony of Vandyk, and the glow of Correggio, point out their Masters.
Enter Company.
Enter Company.
1st Lady.Hey-day, Mr. Silvertongue! what, nobody here!
Silv.Oh, my Lady, we shall have company enough in a trice; if your carriage is seen at my door, no other will pass it, I am sure.
1st Lady.Familiar Monster! [Aside.] That's a beautiful Diana, Mr. Silvertongue; but in the name of Wonder, how came Actæon to be placed on the top of a House?
Silv.That's a David and Bathsheba, Ma'am.
Lady.Oh, I crave their pardon!——I remember the Names, but know nothing of the Story.
More Company enters.
More Company enters.
1st Gent.Was not that Lady Frances Touchwood, coming up with Mrs. Racket?
2d Gent.I think so;——yes, it is, faith.——Let us go nearer.
Enter LadyFrances,Mrs.Racket,and MissOgle.
Enter LadyFrances,Mrs.Racket,and MissOgle.
Silv.Yes, Sir, this is to be the first Lot:—the Model of a City, in wax.
2d Gent.The Model of a City! What City?
Silv.That I have not been able to discover; but call it Rome, Pekin, or London, 'tis still a City: you'll find in it the same jarring interests, the same passions, the same virtues, and the same vices, whatever the name.
Gent.You may as well present us a Map ofTerra Incognita.
Silv.Oh, pardon me, Sir! a lively imagination would convert this waxen City into an endless and interesting amusement. For instance—look into this little House on the right-hand; there are four old Prudes in it, taking care of their Neighbours Reputations. This elegant Mansion on the left, decorated with Corinthian pillars—who needs be told that it belongs to a Court Lord, and is the habitation of Patriotism, Philosophy, and Virtue? Here's a City Hall—the rich steams that issue from the windows, nourish a neighbouring Work-House. Here's a Church—we'll pass over that, the doors are shut. The Parsonage-house comes next;—we'll take a peep here, however.—Look at the Doctor! he's asleep on a volume of Toland; whilst his Lady is putting onrougefor the Masquerade.—Oh! oh! this can be no English City; our Parsons are all orthodox, and their Wives the daughters of Modesty and Meekness.
LadyFrancesand MissOglecome forward, followed byCourtall.
LadyFrancesand MissOglecome forward, followed byCourtall.
Lady Fran.I wish Sir George was here.——This man follows me about, and stares at me in such a way, that I am quite uneasy.
Miss Ogle.He has travell'd, and is heir to an immense estate; so he's impertinent by Patent.
Court.You are very cruel, Ladies. Miss Ogle—you will not let me speak to you. As to this little scornful Beauty, she has frown'd me dead fifty times.
Lady Fran.Sir—I am a married Woman. (Confus'd.)
Court.A married Woman! a good hint. (Aside.) 'Twould be a shame if such a charming Woman was not married. But I see you are a Daphne just come from your sheep, and your meadows; your crook, and your waterfalls. Pray now, who is the happy Damon, to whom you have vow'd eternal truth and constancy?
Miss Ogle.'Tis Lady Frances Touchwood, Mr. Courtall, to whom you are speaking.
Court.Lady Frances! By Heaven, that's Saville's old flame. [Aside.] I beg your Ladyship's pardon. I ought to have believed that such beauty could belong only to your Name——a Name I have long been enamour'd of; because I knew it to be that of the finest Woman in the world.
Mrs.Racketcomes forward.
Mrs.Racketcomes forward.
Lady Fran.[Apart.] My dear Mrs. Racket, I am so frighten'd! Here's a Man making love to me, though he knows I am married.
Mrs. Rack.Oh, the sooner for that, my dear; don't mind him. Was you at theCassinolast night, Mr. Courtall?
Court.I look'd in.——'Twas impossible to stay. No body there but Antiques. You'll be at Lady Brilliant's to-night, doubtless?
Mrs. Rack.Yes, I go with Lady Frances.
Lady Fran.Bless me! I did not know this Gentleman was acquainted with Mrs. Racket.—I behaved so rude to him! [To MissOgle.]
Mrs. Rack.Come, Ma'am; [looking at her Watch.] 'tis past one. I protest, if we don't fly to Kensington, we sha'n't find a soul there.
Lady Fran.Won't this Gentleman go with us?
Court.[Looking surpris'd.] To be sure, you make me happy, Madam, beyond description.
Mrs. Rack.Oh, never mind him—he'll follow.
[Exeunt LadyFrances,Mrs.Racket,and MissOgle.
Court.LadyTouchwood! with a vengeance! But, 'tis always so;—your reserved Ladies are like ice, 'egad!—no sooner begin to soften, than they melt.
[Following.
END of the SECOND ACT.
END of the SECOND ACT.
AÂ CÂ TÂ Â IÂ IÂ I.SCENE I.Mr.Hardy's.EnterLetitiaand Mrs.Racket.Mrs.Racket.
AÂ CÂ TÂ Â IÂ IÂ I.SCENE I.Mr.Hardy's.EnterLetitiaand Mrs.Racket.Mrs.Racket.
Come, prepare, prepare; your Lover is coming.
Letit.My Lover!—Confess now that my absence at dinner was a severe mortification to him.
Mrs. Rack.I can't absolutely swear it spoilt his appetite; he eat as if he was hungry, and drank his wine as though he liked it.
Letit.What was the apology?
Mrs. Rack.That you were ill;—but I gave him a hint, that your extreme bashfulness could not support his eye.
Letit.If I comprehend him, aukwardness and bashfulness are the last faults he can pardon in a woman; so expect to see me transform'd into the veriest maukin.
Mrs. Rack.You persevere then?
Letit.Certainly. I know the design is a rash one, and the event important;—it either makes Doricourt mine by all the tenderest ties of passion, or deprives me of him for ever; and never to be his wife will afflict me less, than to be his wife and not be belov'd.
Mrs. Rack.So you wo'n't trust to the good old maxim—"Marry first, and love will follow?"
Letit.As readily as I would venture my last guinea, that good fortune might follow. The woman that has not touch'd the heart of a man before he leads her to the altar, has scarcely a chance to charm it when possession and security turn their powerful arms against her.—But here he comes.—I'll disappear for a moment.—Don't spare me.
[ExitLetitia.
EnterDoricourt (not seeing Mrs.Racket.)
EnterDoricourt (not seeing Mrs.Racket.)
Doric.So! [Looking at a Picture.] this is my mistress, I presume.—Ma foi!the painter has hit her off.—The downcast eye—the blushing cheek—timid—apprehensive—bashful.—A tear and a prayer-book would have made herLa Bella Magdalena.—
Givemea woman in whose touching mienA mind, a soul, a polish'd art is seen;Whose motion speaks, whose poignant air can move.Such are the darts to wound with endless love.
Mrs. Rack.Is that an impromptu? [Touching him on the shoulder with her fan.]
Doric.(starting.) Madam!—[Aside.] Finely caught!—Not absolutely—it struck me during the dessert, as a motto for your picture.
Mrs. Rack.Gallantly turn'd! I perceive, however, Miss Hardy's charms have made no violent impression on you.—And who can wonder?—the poor girl's defects are so obvious.
Doric.Defects!
Mrs. Rack.Merely those of education.—Her father's indulgence ruin'd her.—Mauvaise honte—conceit and ignorance—all unite in the Lady you are to marry.
Doric.Marry!—I marry such a woman!—Your picture, I hope, is overcharged.—I marrymauvaise honte, pertness and ignorance!
Mrs. Rack.Thank your stars, that ugliness and ill temper are not added to the list.—You must think her handsome?
Doric.Half her personal beauty would content me; but could the Medicean Venus be animated for me, and endowed with a vulgar soul,Ishould become the statue, and my heart transformed to marble.
Mrs. Rack.Bless us!—We are in a hopeful way then!
Doric.(Aside.) There must be some envy in this!—I see she is a coquette. Ha, ha, ha! And you imagine I am persuaded of the truth of your character? ha, ha, ha! Miss Hardy, I have been assur'd, Madam, is elegant and accomplished:——but one must allow for a Lady's painting.
Mrs. Rack.(Aside.) I'll be even with him for that. Ha! ha! ha! and so you have found me out!—Well, I protest I meant no harm; 'twas only to increase theéclatof her appearance, that I threw a veil over her charms.——Here comes the Lady;—her elegance and accomplishments will announce themselves.
EnterLetitia,running.
EnterLetitia,running.
Let.La! Cousin, do you know that our John——oh, dear heart!—I didn't see you, Sir. (Hanging down her head, and dropping behind Mrs.Racket.)
Mrs. Rack.Fye, Letitia! Mr. Doricourt thinks you a woman of elegant manners. Stand forward, and confirm his opinion.
Let.No, no; keep before me.——He's my Sweetheart; and 'tis impudent to look one's Sweetheart in the face, you know.
Mrs. Rack.You'll allow in future for a Lady's painting, Sir. Ha! ha! ha!
Doric.I am astonish'd!
Let.Well, hang it, I'll take heart.—Why, he is but a Man, you know, Cousin;—and I'll let him see I wasn't born in a Wood to be scar'd by an Owl. [Half apart; advances, and looks at him through her fingers.] He! he! he! [Goes up to him, and makes a very stiff formal curtesy.]—[He bows.]—You have been a great Traveller, Sir, I hear?
Dor.Yes, Madam.
Let.Then I wish you'd tell us about the fine sights you saw when you went over-sea.—I have read in a book, that there are some countries where the Men and Women are all Horses.—Did you see any of them?
Mrs. Rack.Mr. Doricourt is not prepared, my dear, for these enquiries; he is reflecting on the importance of the question, and will answer you——when he can.
Let.When he can! Why, he's as slow in speech, as Aunt Margery, when she's reading Thomas Aquinas;—and stands gaping like mum-chance.
Mrs. Rack.Have a little discretion.
Let.Hold your tongue!—Sure I may say what I please before I am married, if I can't afterwards.—D'ye think a body does not know how to talk to a Sweetheart. He is not the first I have had.
Dor.Indeed!
Let.Oh, Lud! He speaks!—Why, if you must know—there was the Curate at home:—when Papa was a-hunting, he used to come a suitoring, and make speeches to me out of books.—No body knows what amortof fine things he used to say to me;—and call me Venis, and Jubah, and Dinah!
Dor.And pray, fair Lady, how did you answer him?
Let.Why, I used to say, Look you, Mr. Curate, don't think to come over me with your flim-flams; for a better Man than ever trod in your shoes, is coming over-sea to marry me;—but, ifags! I begin to think I was out.—Parson Dobbins was the sprightfuller man of the two.
Dor.Surely this cannot be Miss Hardy!
Let.Laws! why, don't you know me! You saw me to-day—but I was daunted before my Father, and the Lawyer, and all them, and did not care to speak out:—so, may be, you thought I couldn't;—but I can talk as fast as any body, when I know folks a little:—and now I have shewn my parts, I hope you'll like me better.
EnterHardy.
EnterHardy.
Har.I foresee this won't do!—Mr. Doricourt, may be you take my Daughter for a Fool; butyouare mistaken: she's a sensible Girl, as any in England.
Dor.I am convinced she has a very uncommon understanding, Sir. [Aside.] I did not think he had been such an Ass.
Let.My Father will undo the whole.—Laws! Papa, how can you think he can take me for a fool! when every body knows I beat the Potecary at Conundrums last Christmas-time? and didn't I make a string of names, all in riddles, for the Lady's Diary?—There was a little River, and a great House; that was Newcastle.—There was what a Lamb says, and three Letters; that wasBa, andk-e-r, ker, Baker.—There was—
Hardy.Don't stand ba-a-ing there. You'll make me mad in a moment!—I tell you, Sir, that for all that, she's dev'lish sensible.
Doric.Sir, I give all possible credit to your assertions.
Letit.Laws! Papa, do come along. If you stand watching, how can my Sweetheart break his mind, and tell me how he admires me?
Doric.That would be difficult, indeed, Madam.
Hardy.I tell you, Letty, I'll have no more of this.——I see well enough——
Letit.Laws! don't snub me before my Husband—that is to be.—You'll teach him to snub me too,—and I believe, by his looks, he'd like to begin now.—So, let us go, Cousin; you may tell the Gentleman what a genus I have—how I can cut Watch-papers, and work Cat-gut; make Quadrille-baskets with Pins, and take Profiles in Shade; ay, as well as the Lady at No. 62, South Moulton-street, Grosvenor-square.
[ExitHardyandLetitia.
Mrs. Rack.What think you of my painting, now?
Doric.Oh, mere water-colours, Madam! The Lady has caricatured your picture.
Mrs. Rack.And how does she strike you on the whole?
Doric.Like a good Design, spoiled by the incapacity of the Artist. Her faults are evidently the result of her Father's weak indulgence. I observed an expression in her eye, that seemed to satyrise the folly of her lips.
Mrs. Rack.But at her age, when Education is fixed, and Manner becomes Nature—hopes of improvement—
Doric.Would be as rational, as hopes of Gold from a Jugler's Crucible.—Doricourt's Wife must be incapable of improvement; but it must be because she's got beyond it.
Mrs. Rack.I am pleased your misfortune sits no heavier.
Doric.Your pardon, Madam; so mercurial was the hour in which I was born, that misfortunes always go plump to the bottom of my heart, like a pebble in water, and leave the surface unruffled.—I shall certainly set off for Bath, or the other world, to-night;—but whether I shall use a chaise with four swift coursers, or go off in a tangent—from the aperture of a pistol, deserves consideration; so I make myadieus. (Going.)
Mrs. Rack.Oh, but I intreat you, postpone your journey 'till to-morrow; determine on which you will—you must be this night at the Masquerade.
Doric.Masquerade!
Mrs. Rack.Why not?—If you resolve to visit the other world, you may as well take one night's pleasure first in this, you know.
Doric.Faith, that's very true; Ladies are the best Philosophers, after all. Expect me at the Masquerade.
[ExitDoricourt.
Mrs. Rack.He's a charming Fellow!—I think Letitia sha'n't have him. (Going.)
EnterHardy.
EnterHardy.
Hardy.What's he gone?
Mrs. Rack.Yes; and I am glad he is. You would have ruined us!—Now, I beg, Mr. Hardy, you won't interfere in this business; it is a little out of your way.
[Exit Mrs.Racket.
Hardy.Hang me, if I don't though. I foresee very clearly what will be the end of it, if I leave ye to yourselves; so, I'll e'en follow him to the Masquerade, and tell him all about it: Let me see.—What shall my dress be? A Great Mogul? No.—A Grenadier? No;—no, that, I foresee, would make a laugh. Hang me, if I don't send to my favourite little Quick, and borrow his Jew Isaac's dress:—I know the Dog likes a glass of good wine; so I'll give him a bottle of my Forty-eight, and he shall teach me. Aye, that's it—I'll be Cunning Little Isaac! If they complain of my want of wit, I'll tell 'em the cursed Duenna wears the breeches, and has spoilt my parts. [ExitHardy.
SCENE II.——Courtall's.EnterCourtall, Saville,and three others, from an Apartment in the back Scene. (The last three tipsey.)
SCENE II.——Courtall's.EnterCourtall, Saville,and three others, from an Apartment in the back Scene. (The last three tipsey.)
Court.You shan't go yet:—Another catch, and another bottle!
First Gent.May I be a bottle, and an empty bottle, if you catch me at that!—Why, I am going to the Masquerade. Jack——, you know who I mean, is to meet me, and we are to have a leap at the new lustres.
Second Gent.And I am going too—a Harlequin—(hiccups) Am not I in a pretty pickle to make Harlequinades?——And Tony, here—he is going in the disguise—in the disguise—of a Gentleman!
First Gent.We are all very disguised; so bid them draw up—D'ye hear!
[Exeunt the three Gentlemen.
Sav.Thy skull, Courtall, is a Lady's thimble:—no, an egg-shell.
Court.Nay, then you are gone too; you never aspire to similes, but in your cups.
Sav.No, no; I am steady enough—but the fumes of the wine pass directly through thy egg-shell, and leave thy brain as cool as——Hey! I am quite sober; my similes fail me.
Court.Then we'll sit down here, and have one sober bottle.—Bring a table and glasses.
Sav.I'll not swallow another drop; no, though the juice should be the true Falernian.
Court.By the bright eyes of her you love, you shall drink her health.
Sav.Ah! (sitting down.) Her I loved is gone (sighing.)—She's married!
Court.Then bless your stars you are not her Husband! I would be Husband to no Woman in Europe, who was not dev'lish rich, and dev'lish ugly.
Sav.Wherefore ugly?
Court.Because she could not have the conscience to exact those attentions that a Pretty Wife expects; or, if she should, her resentments would be perfectly easy to me, nobody would undertake to revenge her cause.
Sav.Thou art a most licentious fellow!
Court.I should hate my own wife, that's certain; but I have a warm heart for those of other people; and so here's to the prettiest Wife in England—Lady Frances Touchwood.
Sav.Lady Frances Touchwood! I rise to drink her. (drinks) How the devil came Lady Frances in your head? I never knew you give a Woman of Chastity before.
Court.That's odd, for you have heard me give half the Women of Fashion in England.—But, pray now, what do you take a Woman of Chastity to be? (sneeringly.)
Sav.Such a woman as Lady Frances Touchwood, Sir.
Court.Oh, you are grave, Sir; I remember you was an Adorer of her's—Why didn't you marry her?
Sav.I had not the arrogance to look so high—Had my fortune been worthy of her, she should not have been ignorant of my admiration.
Court.Precious fellow! What, I suppose you would not dare tell her now that you admire her?
Sav.No, nor you.
Court.By the Lord, I have told her so.
Sav.Have! Impossible!
Court.Ha! ha! ha!—Is it so?
Sav.How did she receive the declaration?
Court.Why, in the old way; blushed, and frowned, and said she was married.
Sav.What amazing things thou art capable of! I could more easily have taken the Pope by the beard, than prophaned her ears with such a declaration.
Court.I shall meet her at Lady Brilliant's to-night, where I shall repeat it; and I'll lay my life, under a mask, she'll hear it all without blush, or frown.
Sav.(rising) 'Tis false, Sir!—She won't.
Court.She will! (rising) Nay, I'd venture to lay a round sum, that I prevail on her to go out with me——only to taste the fresh air, I mean.
Sav.Preposterous vanity! From this moment I suspect that half the victories you have boasted, are false and slanderous, as your pretended influence with Lady Frances.
Court.Pretended!—How should such a Fellow as you, now, who never soared beyond a cherry-cheeked Daughter of a Ploughman in Norfolk, judge of the influence of a Man of my Figure and Habits? I could shew thee a list, in which there are names to shake thy faith in the whole sex!—and, to that list I have no doubt of adding the name of Lady——
Sav.Hold, Sir! My ears cannot bear the profanation;—you cannot—dare not approach her!—For your soul you dare not mention Love to her! Her look would freeze the word, whilst it hovered on thy licentious lips!
Court.Whu! whu! Well, we shall see—this evening, by Jupiter, the trial shall be made—if I fail—I fail.
Sav.I think thou darest not!—But my life, my honour on her purity.
[ExitSaville.
Court.Hot-headed fool! But since he has brought it to this point, by Gad I'll try what can be done with her Ladyship (musing)—(rings) She's frost-work, and the prejudices of education yet strong:ergo, passionate professions will only inflame her pride, and put her on her guard.—For other arts then!