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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Peg Woffington, by Charles Reade
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Peg Woffington
+
+Author: Charles Reade
+
+Release Date: January, 2003 [Etext #3670]
+Posting Date: January 14, 2010
+Last Updated: March 5, 2018
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PEG WOFFINGTON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by James Rusk
+
+
+
+
+
+PEG WOFFINGTON
+
+By Charles Reade
+
+
+To T. Taylor, Esq., my friend, and coadjutor in the comedy of “Masks and
+Faces,” to whom the reader owes much of the best matter in this tale:
+and to the memory of Margaret Woffington, falsely _summed up_ until
+to-day, this “Dramatic Story” is inscribed by CHARLES READE.--
+
+LONDON. Dec. 15, 1852.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+ABOUT the middle of the last century, at eight o'clock in the evening,
+in a large but poor apartment, a man was slumbering on a rough couch.
+His rusty and worn suit of black was of a piece with his uncarpeted
+room, the deal table of home manufacture, and its slim unsnuffed candle.
+
+The man was Triplet, scene painter, actor and writer of sanguinary
+plays, in which what ought to be, viz., truth, plot, situation and
+dialogue, were not; and what ought not to be, were--_scilicet,_ small
+talk, big talk, fops, ruffians, and ghosts.
+
+His three mediocrities fell so short of one talent that he was sometimes
+_impransus._
+
+He slumbered, but uneasily; the dramatic author was uppermost, and his
+“Demon of the Hayloft” hung upon the thread of popular favor.
+
+On his uneasy slumber entered from the theater Mrs. Triplet.
+
+She was a lady who in one respect fell behind her husband; she lacked
+his variety in ill-doing, but she recovered herself by doing her one
+thing a shade worse than he did any of his three. She was what is called
+in grim sport an actress; she had just cast her mite of discredit on
+royalty by playing the Queen, and had trundled home the moment the
+breath was out of her royal body. She came in rotatory with fatigue,
+and fell, gristle, into a chair; she wrenched from her brow a diadem and
+eyed it with contempt, took from her pocket a sausage, and contemplated
+it with respect and affection, placed it in a frying-pan on the fire,
+and entered her bedroom, meaning to don a loose wrapper, and dethrone
+herself into comfort.
+
+But the poor woman was shot walking by Morpheus, and subsided
+altogether; for dramatic performances, amusing and exciting to youth
+seated in the pit, convey a certain weariness to those bright beings who
+sparkle on the stage for bread and cheese.
+
+Royalty, disposed of, still left its trail of events. The sausage began
+to “spit.” The sound was hardly out of its body, when poor Triplet
+writhed like a worm on a hook. “Spitter, spittest,” went the sausage.
+Triplet groaned, and at last his inarticulate murmurs became words:
+“That's right, pit now, that is so reasonable to condemn a poor fellow's
+play before you have heard it out.” Then, with a change of tone, “Tom,”
+ muttered he, “they are losing their respect for specters; if they do,
+hunger will make a ghost of me.” Next he fancied the clown or somebody
+had got into his ghost's costume.
+
+“Dear,” said the poor dreamer, “the clown makes a very pretty specter,
+with his ghastly white face, and his blood-boltered cheeks and nose. I
+never saw the fun of a clown before, no! no! no! it is not the clown, it
+is worse, much worse; oh, dear, ugh!” and Triplet rolled off the couch
+like Richard the Third. He sat a moment on the floor, with a finger
+in each eye; and then, finding he was neither daubing, ranting, nor
+deluging earth with “acts,” he accused himself of indolence, and sat
+down to write a small tale of blood and bombast; he took his seat at the
+deal table with some alacrity, for he had recently made a discovery.
+
+How to write well, _rien que cela._
+
+“First, think in as homely a way as you can; next, shove your pen under
+the thought, and lift it by polysyllables to the true level of fiction,”
+ (when done, find a publisher--if you can). “This,” said Triplet,
+“insures common sense to your ideas, which does pretty well for a
+basis,” said Triplet, apologetically, “and elegance to the dress they
+wear.” Triplet, then casting his eyes round in search of such actual
+circumstances as could be incorporated on this plan with fiction, began
+to work thus:
+
+
+ TRIPLET'S FACTS. TRIPLET'S FICTION.
+
+ A farthing dip is on the table. A solitary candle cast its pale
+ gleams around.
+
+ It wants snuffing. Its elongated wick betrayed an owner
+ steeped in oblivion.
+
+
+ He jumped up, and snuffed it. He rose languidly, and trimmed it with
+ his fingers. Burned his with an
+ instrument that he had by his fingers,
+ and swore a little. side for that
+ purpose, and muttered a silent
+ ejaculation
+
+
+Before, however, the mole Triplet could undermine literature and level
+it with the dust, various interruptions and divisions broke in upon his
+design, and _sic nos servavit_ Apollo. As he wrote the last sentence, a
+loud rap came to his door. A servant in livery brought him a note from
+Mr. Vane, dated Covent Garden. Triplet's eyes sparkled, he bustled,
+wormed himself into a less rusty coat, and started off to the Theater
+Royal, Covent Garden.
+
+In those days, the artists of the pen and the brush ferreted patrons,
+instead of aiming to be indispensable to the public, the only patron
+worth a single gesture of the quill.
+
+Mr. Vane had conversed with Triplet, that is, let Triplet talk to him in
+a coffee-house, and Triplet, the most sanguine of unfortunate men, had
+already built a series of expectations upon that interview, when this
+note arrived. Leaving him on his road from Lambeth to Covent Garden, we
+must introduce more important personages.
+
+Mr. Vane was a wealthy gentleman from Shropshire, whom business had
+called to London four months ago, and now pleasure detained. Business
+still occupied the letters he sent now and then to his native county;
+but it had ceased to occupy the writer. He was a man of learning and
+taste, as times went; and his love of the Arts had taken him some time
+before our tale to the theaters, then the resort of all who pretended
+to taste; and it was thus he had become fascinated by Mrs. Woffington, a
+lady of great beauty, and a comedian high in favor with the town.
+
+The first night he saw her was an epoch in the history of this
+gentleman's mind. He had learning and refinement, and he had not great
+practical experience, and such men are most open to impression from the
+stage. He saw a being, all grace and bright nature, move like a goddess
+among the stiff puppets of the scene; her glee and her pathos were
+equally catching, she held a golden key at which all the doors of
+the heart flew open. Her face, too, was as full of goodness as
+intelligence--it was like no other farce; the heart bounded to meet it.
+
+He rented a box at her theater. He was there every night before the
+curtain drew up; and I'm sorry to say, he at last took half a dislike
+to Sunday--Sunday “which knits up the raveled sleave of care,” Sunday
+“tired nature's sweet restorer,” because on Sunday there was no Peg
+Woffington. At first he regarded her as a being of another sphere, an
+incarnation of poetry and art; but by degrees his secret aspirations
+became bolder. She was a woman; there were men who knew her; some of
+them inferior to him in position, and, he flattered himself, in mind.
+He had even heard a tale against her character. To him her face was its
+confutation, and he knew how loose-tongued is calumny; but still--!
+
+At last, one day he sent her a letter, unsigned. This letter expressed
+his admiration of her talent in warm but respectful terms; the writer
+told her it had become necessary to his heart to return her in some way
+his thanks for the land of enchantment to which she had introduced him.
+Soon after this, choice flowers found their way to her dressing-room
+every night, and now and then verses and precious stones mingled with
+her roses and eglantine. And oh, how he watched the great actress's
+eye all the night; how he tried to discover whether she looked oftener
+toward his box than the corresponding box on the other side of the
+house. Did she notice him, or did she not? What a point gained, if she
+was conscious of his nightly attendance. She would feel he was a friend,
+not a mere auditor. He was jealous of the pit, on whom Mrs. Woffington
+lavished her smiles without measure.
+
+At last, one day he sent her a wreath of flowers, and implored her, if
+any word he had said to her had pleased or interested her, to wear this
+wreath that night. After he had done this he trembled; he had courted a
+decision, when, perhaps, his safety lay in patience and time. She
+made her _entree;_ he turned cold as she glided into sight from the
+prompter's side; he raised his eyes slowly and fearfully from her feet
+to her head; her head was bare, wreathed only by its own rich glossy
+honors. “Fool!” thought he, “to think she would hang frivolities upon
+that glorious head for me.” Yet his disappointment told him he had
+really hoped it; he would not have sat out the play but for a leaden
+incapacity of motion that seized him.
+
+The curtain drew up for the fifth act, and!--could he believe his
+eyes?--Mrs. Woffington stood upon the stage with his wreath upon her
+graceful head. She took away his breath. She spoke the epilogue, and, as
+the curtain fell, she lifted her eyes, he thought, to his box, and made
+him a distinct, queen-like courtesy; his heart fluttered to his mouth,
+and he walked home on wings and tiptoe. In short--
+
+Mrs. Woffington, as an actress, justified a portion of this enthusiasm;
+she was one of the truest artists of her day; a fine lady in her
+hands was a lady, with the genteel affectation of a gentlewoman, not a
+harlot's affectation, which is simply and without exaggeration what the
+stage commonly gives us for a fine lady; an old woman in her hands was
+a thorough woman, thoroughly old, not a cackling young person of epicene
+gender. She played Sir Harry Wildair like a man, which is how he ought
+to be played (or, which is better still, not at all), so that Garrick
+acknowledged her as a male rival, and abandoned the part he no longer
+monopolized.
+
+Now it very, very rarely happens that a woman of her age is high enough
+in art and knowledge to do these things. In players, vanity cripples art
+at every step. The young actress who is not a Woffington aims to display
+herself by means of her part, which is vanity; not to raise her part by
+sinking herself in it, which is art. It has been my misfortune to see
+----, and----, and ----, et ceteras, play the man; Nature, forgive them,
+if you can, for art never will; they never reached any idea more manly
+than a steady resolve to exhibit the points of a woman with greater
+ferocity than they could in a gown. But consider, ladies, a man is not
+the meanest of the brute creation, so how can he be an unwomanly female?
+This sort of actress aims not to give her author's creation to the
+public, but to trot out the person instead of the creation, and shows
+sots what a calf it has--and is.
+
+Vanity, vanity! all is vanity! Mesdames les Charlatanes.
+
+Margaret Woffington was of another mold; she played the ladies of high
+comedy with grace, distinction, and delicacy. But in Sir Harry Wildair
+she parted with a woman's mincing foot and tongue, and played the man
+in a style large, spirited and _elance._ As Mrs. Day (committee) she
+painted wrinkles on her lovely face so honestly that she was taken for
+threescore, and she carried out the design with voice and person, and
+did a vulgar old woman to the life. She disfigured her own beauties to
+show the beauty of her art; in a word, she was an artist! It does not
+follow she was the greatest artist that ever breathed; far from it. Mr.
+Vane was carried to this notion by passion and ignorance.
+
+On the evening of our tale he was at his post patiently sitting out one
+of those sanguinary discourses our rude forefathers thought were
+tragic plays. _Sedet aeternumque Sedebit Infelix Theseus,_ because Mrs.
+Woffington is to speak the epilogue.
+
+These epilogues were curiosities of the human mind; they whom, just to
+ourselves and _them,_ we call our _forbears,_ had an idea their blood
+and bombast were not ridiculous enough in themselves, so when the
+curtain had fallen on the _debris_ of the _dramatis personae,_ and
+of common sense, they sent on an actress to turn all the sentiment so
+laboriously acquired into a jest.
+
+To insist that nothing good or beautiful shall be carried safe from a
+play out into the street was the bigotry of English horseplay. Was a
+Lucretia the heroine of the tragedy, she was careful in the epilogue
+to speak like Messalina. Did a king's mistress come to hunger and
+repentance, she disinfected all the _petites maitresses_ in the house
+of the moral, by assuring them that sin is a joke, repentance a greater,
+and that she individually was ready for either if they would but cry,
+laugh and pay. Then the audience used to laugh, and if they did not,
+lo! the manager, actor and author of heroic tragedy were exceeding
+sorrowful.
+
+While sitting attendance on the epilogue Mr. Vane had nothing to
+distract him from the congregation but a sanguinary sermon in five
+heads, so his eyes roved over the pews, and presently he became aware of
+a familiar face watching him closely. The gentleman to whom it belonged
+finding himself recognized left his seat, and a minute later Sir Charles
+Pomander entered Mr. Vane's box.
+
+This Sir Charles Pomander was a gentleman of vice; pleasure he called
+it. Mr. Vane had made his acquaintance two years ago in Shropshire. Sir
+Charles, who husbanded everything except his soul, had turned himself
+out to grass for a month. His object was, by roast mutton, bread with
+some little flour in it, air, water, temperance, chastity and peace, to
+be enabled to take a deeper plunge into impurities of food and morals.
+
+A few nights ago, unseen by Mr. Vane, he had observed him in the
+theater; an ordinary man would have gone at once and shaken hands with
+him, but this was not an ordinary man, this was a diplomatist. First
+of all, he said to himself: “What is this man doing here?” Then he soon
+discovered this man must be in love with some actress; then it became
+his business to know who she was; this, too, soon betrayed itself. Then
+it became more than ever Sir Charles's business to know whether Mrs.
+Woffington returned the sentiment; and here his penetration was at
+fault, for the moment; he determined, however, to discover.
+
+Mr. Vane then received his friend, all unsuspicious how that friend
+had been skinning him with his eyes for some time past. After the usual
+compliments had passed between two gentlemen who had been hand and glove
+for a month and forgotten each other's existence for two years, Sir
+Charles, still keeping in view his design, said:
+
+“Let us go upon the stage.” The fourth act had just concluded.
+
+“Go upon the stage!” said Mr. Vane; “what, where she--I mean among the
+actors?”
+
+“Yes; come into the green-room. There are one or two people of
+reputation there; I will introduce you to them, if you please.”
+
+“Go upon the stage!” why, if it had been proposed to him to go to heaven
+he would not have been more astonished. He was too astonished at first
+to realize the full beauty of the arrangement, by means of which he
+might be within a yard of Mrs. Woffington, might feel her dress rustle
+past him, might speak to her, might drink her voice fresh from her lips
+almost before it mingled with meaner air. Silence gives consent, and Mr.
+Vane, though he thought a great deal, said nothing; so Pomander rose,
+and they left the boxes together. He led the way to the stage door,
+which was opened obsequiously to him; they then passed through a dismal
+passage, and suddenly emerged upon that scene of enchantment, the
+stage--a dirty platform encumbered on all sides with piles of scenery in
+flats. They threaded their way through rusty velvet actors and fustian
+carpenters, and entered the green-room. At the door of this magic
+chamber Vane trembled and half wished he could retire. They entered; his
+apprehension gave way to disappointment, she was not there. Collecting
+himself, he was presently introduced to a smart, jaunty, and, to do
+him justice, _distingue_ old beau. This was Colley Cibber, Esq., poet
+laureate, and retired actor and dramatist, a gentleman who is entitled
+to a word or two.
+
+This Cibber was the only actor since Shakespeare's time who had both
+acted and written well. Pope's personal resentment misleads the reader
+of English poetry as to Cibber's real place among the wits of the day.
+
+The man's talent was dramatic, not didactic, or epic, or pastoral. Pope
+was not so deep in the drama as in other matters, and Cibber was one of
+its luminaries; he wrote some of the best comedies of his day. He also
+succeeded where Dryden, for lack of true dramatic taste, failed. He
+tampered successfully with Shakespeare. Colley Cibber's version of
+“Richard the Third” is impudent and slightly larcenic, but it is
+marvelously effective. It has stood a century, and probably will stand
+forever; and the most admired passages in what literary humbugs who
+pretend they know Shakespeare by the closet, not the stage, accept as
+Shakespeare's “Richard,” are Cibber's.
+
+Mr. Cibber was now in private life, a mild edition of his own
+Lord Foppington; he had none of the snob-fop as represented on our
+conventional stage; nobody ever had, and lived. He was in tolerably
+good taste; but he went ever gold-laced, highly powdered, scented, and
+diamonded, dispensing graceful bows, praises of whoever had the good
+luck to be dead, and satire of all who were here to enjoy it.
+
+Mr. Vane, to whom the drama had now become the golden branch of letters,
+looked with some awe on this veteran, for he had seen many Woffingtons.
+He fell soon upon the subject nearest his heart. He asked Mr. Cibber
+what he thought of Mrs. Woffington. The old gentleman thought well of
+the young lady's talent, especially her comedy; in tragedy, said he, she
+imitates Mademoiselle Dumenil, of the Theatre Francais, and confounds
+the stage rhetorician with the actress. The next question was not so
+fortunate. “Did you ever see so great and true an actress upon the
+whole?”
+
+Mr. Cibber opened his eyes, a slight flush came into his wash-leather
+face, and he replied: “I have not only seen many equal, many superior
+to her, but I have seen some half dozen who would have eaten her up
+and spit her out again, and not known they had done anything out of the
+way.”
+
+Here Pomander soothed the veteran's dudgeon by explaining in dulcet
+tones that his friend was not long from Shropshire, and--The critic
+interrupted him, and bade him not dilute the excuse.
+
+Now Mr. Vane had as much to say as either of them, but he had not the
+habit, which dramatic folks have, of carrying his whole bank in his
+cheek-pocket, so they quenched him for two minutes.
+
+But lovers are not silenced, he soon returned to the attack; he dwelt
+on the grace, the ease, the freshness, the intelligence, the universal
+beauty of Mrs. Woffington. Pomander sneered, to draw him out. Cibber
+smiled, with good-natured superiority. This nettled the young gentleman,
+he fired up, his handsome countenance glowed, he turned Demosthenes for
+her he loved. One advantage he had over both Cibber and Pomander, a fair
+stock of classical learning; on this he now drew.
+
+“Other actors and actresses,” said he, “are monotonous in voice,
+monotonous in action, but Mrs. Woffington's delivery has the compass and
+variety of nature, and her movements are free from the stale uniformity
+that distinguishes artifice from art. The others seem to me to have but
+two dreams of grace, a sort of crawling on stilts is their motion,
+and an angular stiffness their repose.” He then cited the most famous
+statues of antiquity, and quoted situations in plays where, by her
+fine dramatic instinct, Mrs. Woffington, he said, threw her person into
+postures similar to these, and of equal beauty; not that she strikes
+attitudes like the rest, but she melts from one beautiful statue into
+another; and, if sculptors could gather from her immortal graces,
+painters, too, might take from her face the beauties that belong of
+right to passion and thought, and orators might revive their withered
+art, and learn from those golden lips the music of old Athens, that
+quelled tempestuous mobs, and princes drunk with victory.
+
+Much as this was, he was going to say more, ever so much more, but he
+became conscious of a singular sort of grin upon every face; this grin
+made him turn rapidly round to look for its cause. It explained itself
+at once; at his very elbow was a lady, whom his heart recognized, though
+her back was turned to him. She was dressed in a rich silk gown, pearl
+white, with flowers and sprigs embroidered; her beautiful white neck and
+arms were bare. She was sweeping up the room with the epilogue in her
+hand, learning it off by heart; at the other end of the room she turned,
+and now she shone full upon him.
+
+It certainly was a dazzling creature. She had a head of beautiful form,
+perched like a bird upon a throat massive yet shapely and smooth as a
+column of alabaster, a symmetrical brow, black eyes full of fire and
+tenderness, a delicious mouth, with a hundred varying expressions, and
+that marvelous faculty of giving beauty alike to love or scorn, a
+sneer or a smile. But she had one feature more remarkable than all, her
+eyebrows--the actor's feature; they were jet black, strongly marked,
+and in repose were arched like a rainbow; but it was their extraordinary
+flexibility which made other faces upon the stage look sleepy beside
+Margaret Woffington's. In person she was considerably above the middle
+height, and so finely formed that one could not determine the exact
+character of her figure. At one time it seemed all stateliness, at
+another time elegance personified, and flowing voluptuousness at
+another. She was Juno, Psyche, Hebe, by turns, and for aught we know at
+will.
+
+It must be confessed that a sort of halo of personal grandeur surrounds
+a great actress. A scene is set; half a dozen nobodies are there lost in
+it, because they are and seem lumps of nothing. The great artist steps
+upon that scene, and how she fills it in a moment! Mind and majesty wait
+upon her in the air; her person is lost in the greatness of her personal
+presence; she dilates with _thought,_ and a stupid giantess looks a
+dwarf beside her.
+
+No wonder then that Mr. Vane felt overpowered by this torch in a closet.
+To vary the metaphor, it seemed to him, as she swept up and down, as if
+the green-room was a shell, and this glorious creature must burst it
+and be free. Meantime, the others saw a pretty actress studying her
+business; and Cibber saw a dramatic school-girl learning what he
+presumed to be a very silly set of words. Sir C. Pomander's eye had
+been on her the moment she entered, and he watched keenly the effect of
+Vane's eloquent eulogy; but apparently the actress was too deep in her
+epilogue for anything else. She came in, saying, “Mum, mum, mum,” over
+her task, and she went on doing so. The experienced Mr. Cibber, who had
+divined Vane in an instant, drew him into a corner, and complimented him
+on his well-timed eulogy.
+
+“You acted that mighty well, sir,” said he. “Stop my vitals! if I did
+not think you were in earnest, till I saw the jade had slipped in among
+us. It told, sir--it told.”
+
+Up fired Vane. “What do you mean, sir?” said he. “Do you suppose my
+admiration of that lady is feigned?”
+
+“No need to speak so loud, sir,” replied the old gentleman; “she hears
+you. These hussies have ears like hawks.”
+
+He then dispensed a private wink and a public bow; with which he
+strolled away from Mr. Vane, and walked feebly and jauntily up the
+room, whistling “Fair Hebe;” fixing his eye upon the past, and somewhat
+ostentatiously overlooking the existence of the present company.
+
+There is no great harm in an old gentleman whistling, but there are two
+ways of doing it; and as this old beau did it, it seemed not unlike a
+small cock-a-doodle-doo of general defiance; and the denizens of the
+green-room, swelled now to a considerable number by the addition of all
+the ladies and gentlemen who had been killed in the fourth act, or whom
+the buttery-fingered author could not keep in hand until the fall of
+the curtain, felt it as such; and so they were not sorry when Mrs.
+Woffington, looking up from her epilogue, cast a glance upon the old
+beau, waited for him, and walked parallel with him on the other side
+of the room, giving an absurdly exact imitation of his carriage and
+deportment. To make this more striking, she pulled out of her pocket,
+after a mock search, a huge paste ring, gazed on it with a ludicrous
+affectation of simple wonder, stuck it, like Cibber's diamond, on her
+little finger, and, pursing up her mouth, proceeded to whistle a quick
+movement,
+
+ “Which, by some devilish cantrip sleight,”
+
+played round the old beau's slow movement, without being at variance
+with it. As for the character of this ladylike performance, it was
+clear, brilliant, and loud as blacksmith.
+
+The folk laughed; Vane was shocked. “She profanes herself by whistling,”
+ thought he. Mr. Cibber was confounded. He appeared to have no idea
+whence came this sparkling adagio. He looked round, placed his hands to
+his ears, and left off whistling. So did his musical accomplice.
+
+“Gentlemen,” said Cibber, with pathetic gravity, “the wind howls most
+dismally this evening! I took it for a drunken shoemaker!”
+
+At this there was a roar of laughter, except from Mr. Vane. Peg
+Woffington laughed as merrily as the others, and showed a set of
+teeth that were really dazzling; but all in one moment, without the
+preliminaries an ordinary countenance requires, this laughing Venus
+pulled a face gloomy beyond conception. Down came her black brows
+straight as a line, and she cast a look of bitter reproach on all
+present; resuming her study, as who should say, “Are ye not ashamed to
+divert a poor girl from her epilogue?” And then she went on, “Mum! mum!
+mum!” casting off ever and anon resentful glances; and this made the
+fools laugh again.
+
+The Laureate was now respectfully addressed by one of his admirers,
+James Quin, the Falstaff of the day, and the rival at this time of
+Garrick in tragic characters, though the general opinion was, that he
+could not long maintain a standing against the younger genius and his
+rising school of art.
+
+Off the stage, James Quin was a character; his eccentricities were
+three--a humorist, a glutton and an honest man; traits that often caused
+astonishment and ridicule, especially the last.
+
+“May we not hope for something from Mr. Cibber's pen after so long a
+silence?”
+
+“No,” was the considerate reply. “Who have ye got to play it?”
+
+“Plenty,” said Quin; “there's your humble servant, there's--”
+
+“Humility at the head of the list,” cried she of the epilogue. “Mum!
+mum! mum!”
+
+Vane thought this so sharp.
+
+“Garrick, Barry, Macklin, Kitty Clive here at my side, Mrs. Cibber,
+the best tragic actress I ever saw; and Woffington, who is as good a
+comedian as you ever saw, sir;” and Quin turned as red as fire.
+
+“Keep your temper, Jemmy,” said Mrs. Woffington with a severe accent.
+“Mum! mum! mum!”
+
+“You misunderstand my question,” replied Cibber, calmly; “I know your
+_dramatis personae_ but where the devil are your actors?”
+
+Here was a blow.
+
+“The public,” said Quin, in some agitation, “would snore if we acted as
+they did in your time.”
+
+“How do you know that, sir?” was the supercilious rejoinder; _“you never
+tried!”_
+
+Mr. Quin was silenced. Peg Woffington looked off her epilogue.
+
+“Bad as we are,” said she coolly, “we might be worse.”
+
+Mr. Cibber turned round, slightly raised his eyebrows.
+
+“Indeed!” said he. “Madam!” added he, with a courteous smile, “will you
+be kind enough to explain to me how you could be worse!”
+
+“If, like a crab, we could go backward!”
+
+At this the auditors tittered; and Mr. Cibber had recourse to his
+spy-glass.
+
+This gentleman was satirical or insolent, as the case might demand,
+in three degrees, of which the snuff-box was the comparative, and
+the spy-glass the superlative. He had learned this on the stage; in
+annihilating Quin he had just used the snuff weapon, and now he drew his
+spy-glass upon poor Peggy.
+
+“Whom have we here?” said he. Then he looked with his spy-glass to see.
+“Oh, the little Irish orange-girl!”
+
+“Whose basket outweighed Colley Cibber's salary for the first twenty
+years of his dramatic career,” was the delicate reply to the above
+delicate remark. It staggered him for a moment; however, he affected
+a most puzzled air, then gradually allowed a light to steal into his
+features.
+
+“Eh! ah! oh! how stupid I am; I understand; you sold something besides
+oranges!”
+
+“Oh!” said Mr. Vane, and colored up to the temples, and cast a look on
+Cibber, as much as to say, “If you were not seventy-three!”
+
+His ejaculation was something so different from any tone any other
+person there present could have uttered that the actress's eye dwelt
+on him for a single moment, and in that moment he felt himself looked
+through and through.
+
+“I sold the young fops a bargain, you mean,” was her calm reply; “and
+now I am come down to the old ones. A truce, Mr. Cibber, what do you
+understand by an actor? Tell me; for I am foolish enough to respect your
+opinion on these matters!”
+
+“An actor, young lady,” said he, gravely, “is an artist who has gone
+deep enough in his art to make dunces, critics and greenhorns take it
+for nature; moreover, he really personates; which your mere _man of the
+stage_ never does. He has learned the true art of self-multiplication.
+He drops Betterton, Booth, Wilkes, or, ahem--”
+
+“Cibber,” inserted Sir Charles Pomander. Cibber bowed.
+
+“In his dressing-room, and comes out young or old, a fop, a valet, a
+lover, or a hero, with voice, mien, and every gesture to match. A grain
+less than this may be good speaking, fine preaching, deep grunting, high
+ranting, eloquent reciting; but I'll be hanged if it is acting!”
+
+“Then Colley Cibber never acted,” whispered Quin to Mrs. Clive.
+
+“Then Margaret Woffington is an actress,” said M. W.; “the fine ladies
+take my Lady Betty for their sister. In Mrs. Day, I pass for a woman of
+seventy; and in Sir Harry Wildair I have been taken for a man. I would
+have told you that before, but I didn't know it was to my credit,” said
+she, slyly, “till Mr. Cibber laid down the law.”
+
+“Proof!” said Cibber.
+
+“A warm letter from one lady, diamond buckles from another, and an offer
+of her hand and fortune from a third; _rien que cela.”_
+
+Mr. Cibber conveyed behind her back a look of absolute incredulity; she
+divined it.
+
+“I will not show you the letters,” continued she, “because Sir Harry,
+though a rake, was a gentleman; but here are the buckles;” and she
+fished them out of her pocket, capacious of such things. The buckles
+were gravely inspected, they made more than one eye water, they were
+undeniable.
+
+“Well, let us see what we can do for her,” said the Laureate. He tapped
+his box and without a moment's hesitation produced the most execrable
+distich in the language:
+
+ “Now who is like Peggy, with talent at will,
+ A maid loved her Harry, for want of a Bill?
+
+“Well, child,” continued he, after the applause which follows
+extemporary verses had subsided, “take _me_ in. Play something to make
+me lose sight of saucy Peg Woffington, and I'll give the world five acts
+more before the curtain falls on Colley Cibber.”
+
+“If you could be deceived,” put in Mr. Vane, somewhat timidly; “I
+think there is no disguise through which grace and beauty such as Mrs.
+Woffington's would not shine, to my eyes.”
+
+“That is to praise my person at the expense of my wit, sir, is it not?”
+ was her reply.
+
+This was the first word she had ever addressed to him. The tones
+appeared so sweet to him that he could not find anything to reply for
+listening to them; and Cibber resumed:
+
+“Meantime, I will show you a real actress; she is coming here to-night
+to meet me. Did ever you children hear of Ann Bracegirdle?”
+
+“Bracegirdle!” said Mrs. Clive; “why, she has been dead this thirty
+years; at least I thought so.”
+
+“Dead to the stage. There is more heat in her ashes than in your fire,
+Kate Clive! Ah! here comes her messenger,” continued he, as an ancient
+man appeared with a letter in his hand. This letter Mrs. Woffington
+snatched and read, and at the same instant in bounced the call-boy.
+“Epilogue called,” said this urchin, in the tone of command which these
+small fry of Parnassus adopt; and, obedient to his high behest, Mrs.
+Woffington moved to the door, with the Bracegirdle missive in her
+hand, but not before she had delivered its general contents: “The great
+actress will be here in a few minutes,” said she, and she glided swiftly
+out of the room.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+PEOPLE whose mind or manners possess any feature, and are not as devoid
+of all eccentricity as half pounds of butter bought of metropolitan
+grocers, are recommended not to leave a roomful of their acquaintances
+until the last but one. Yes, they should always be penultimate. Perhaps
+Mrs. Woffington knew this; but epilogues are stubborn things, and
+call-boys undeniable.
+
+“Did you ever hear a woman whistle before?”
+
+“Never; but I saw one sit astride on an ass in Germany!”
+
+“The saddle was not on her husband, I hope, madam?”
+
+“No, sir; the husband walked by his kinsfolk's side, and made the best
+of a bad bargain, as Peggy's husband will have to.”
+
+“Wait till some one ventures on the gay Lotharia--_illi aes triplex;_
+that means he must have triple brass, Kitty.”
+
+“I deny that, sir; since his wife will always have enough for both.”
+
+“I have not observed the lady's brass,” said Vane, trembling with
+passion; “but I observed her talent, and I noticed that whoever attacks
+her to her face comes badly off.”
+
+“Well said, sir,” answered Quin; “and I wish Kitty here would tell us
+why she hates Mrs. Woffington, the best-natured woman in the theater?”
+
+“I don't hate her, I don't trouble my head about her.”
+
+“Yes, you hate her; for you never miss a cut at her!”
+
+“Do you hate a haunch of venison, Quin?” said the lady.
+
+“No, you little unnatural monster,” replied Quin.
+
+“For all that, you never miss a cut at one, so hold your tongue!”
+
+“Le beau raisonnement!” said Mr. Cibber. “James Quin, don't interfere
+with nature's laws; let our ladies hate one another, it eases their
+minds; try to make them Christians, and you will not convert their
+tempers, but spoil your own. Peggy there hates George Anne Bellamy,
+because she has gaudy silk dresses from Paris, by paying for them, as
+_she_ could, if not too stingy. Kitty here hates Peggy because Rich has
+breeched her, whereas Kitty, who now sets up for a prude, wanted to put
+delicacy off and small-clothes on in Peg's stead, that is where the Kate
+and Peg shoe pinches, near the femoral artery, James.
+
+“Shrimps have the souls of shrimps,” resumed this _censor castigatorque
+minorum._ “Listen to me, and learn that really great actors are great in
+soul, and do not blubber like a great school-girl because Anne Bellamy
+has two yellow silk dresses from Paris, as I saw Woffington blubber
+in this room, and would not be comforted; nor fume like Kitty Clive,
+because Woffington has a pair of breeches and a little boy's rapier to
+go a playing at acting with. When I was young, two giantesses fought
+for empire upon this very stage, where now dwarfs crack and bounce like
+parched peas. They played Roxana and Statira in the 'Rival Queens.'
+Rival queens of art themselves, they put out all their strength. In the
+middle of the last act the town gave judgment in favor of Statira. What
+did Roxana? Did she spill grease on Statira's robe, as Peg Woffington
+would? or stab her, as I believe Kitty here capable of doing? No!
+Statira was never so tenderly killed as that night; she owned this to
+me. Roxana bade the theater farewell that night, and wrote to Statira
+thus: I give you word for word: 'Madam, the best judge we have has
+decided in your favor. I shall never play second on a stage where I have
+been first so long, but I shall often be a spectator, and methinks none
+will appreciate your talent more than I, who have felt its weight. My
+wardrobe, one of the best in Europe, is of no use to me; if you will
+honor me by selecting a few of my dresses, you will gratify me, and
+I shall fancy I see myself upon the stage to greater advantage than
+before.'”
+
+“And what did Statira answer, sir?” said Mr. Vane, eagerly.
+
+“She answered thus: 'Madam, the town has often been wrong, and may have
+been so last night, in supposing that I vied successfully with your
+merit; but this much is certain--and here, madam, I am the best
+judge--that off the stage you have just conquered me. I shall wear
+with pride any dress you have honored, and shall feel inspired to great
+exertions by your presence among our spectators, unless, indeed, the
+sense of your magnanimity and the recollection of your talent should
+damp me by the dread of losing any portion of your good opinion.'”
+
+“What a couple of stiff old things,” said Mrs. Clive.
+
+“Nay, madam, say not so,” cried Vane, warmly; “surely, this was the
+lofty courtesy of two great minds not to be overbalanced by strife,
+defeat, or victory.”
+
+“What were their names, sir?”
+
+“Statira was the great Mrs. Oldfield. Roxana you will see here
+to-night.”
+
+This caused a sensation.
+
+Colley's reminiscences were interrupted by loud applause from the
+theater; the present seldom gives the past a long hearing.
+
+The old war-horse cocked his ears.
+
+“It is Woffington speaking the epilogue,” said Quin.
+
+“Oh, she has got the length of their foot, somehow,” said a small
+actress.
+
+“And the breadth of their hands, too,” said Pomander, waking from a nap.
+
+“It is the depth of their hearts she has sounded,” said Vane.
+
+In those days, if a metaphor started up, the poor thing was coursed up
+hill and down dale, and torn limb from jacket; even in Parliament, a
+trope was sometimes hunted from one session into another.
+
+“You were asking me about Mrs. Oldfield, sir,” resumed Cibber, rather
+peevishly. “I will own to you, I lack words to convey a just idea of
+her double and complete supremacy. But the comedians of this day are
+weak-strained _farceurs_ compared with her, and her tragic tone was
+thunder set to music.
+
+“I saw a brigadier-general cry like a child at her Indiana; I have seen
+her crying with pain herself at the wing (for she was always a great
+sufferer), I have seen her then spring upon the stage as Lady Townley,
+and in a moment sorrow brightened into joy: the air seemed to fill with
+singing-birds, that chirped the pleasures of fashion, love and youth
+in notes sparkling like diamonds and stars and prisms. She was above
+criticism, out of its scope, as is the blue sky; men went not to judge
+her, they drank her, and gazed at her, and were warmed at her, and
+refreshed by her. The fops were awed into silence, and with their
+humbler betters thanked Heaven for her, if they thanked it for anything.
+
+“In all the crowded theater, care and pain and poverty were banished
+from the memory, while Oldfield's face spoke, and her tongue flashed
+melodies; the lawyer forgot his quillets; the polemic, the mote in his
+brother's eye; the old maid, her grudge against the two sexes; the old
+man, his gray hairs and his lost hours. And can it be, that all this
+which should have been immortal, is quite--quite lost, is as though it
+had never been?” he sighed. “Can it be that its fame is now sustained by
+me; who twang with my poor lute, cracked and old, these feeble praises
+of a broken lyre:
+
+
+ 'Whose wires were golden and its heavenly air
+ More tunable than lark to shepherd's ear,
+ When wheat is green, when hawthorn buds appear.'”
+
+He paused, and his eye looked back over many years. Then, with a very
+different tone, he added:
+
+“And that Jack Falstaff there must have seen her, now I think on't.”
+
+“Only once, sir,” said Quin, “and I was but ten years old.”
+
+“He saw her once, and he was ten years old; yet he calls Woffington
+a great comedian, and my son The's wife, with her hatchet face, the
+greatest tragedian he ever saw! Jemmy, what an ass you must be!”
+
+“Mrs. Cibber always makes me cry, and t'other always makes me laugh,”
+ said Quin, stoutly, “that's why.”
+
+_Ce beau raisonnement_ met no answer, but a look of sovereign contempt.
+
+A very trifling incident saved the ladies of the British stage from
+further criticism. There were two candles in this room, one on each
+side; the call-boy had entered, and, poking about for something, knocked
+down and broke one of these.
+
+“Awkward imp!” cried a velvet page.
+
+“I'll go _to the Treasury_ for another, ma'am,” said the boy pertly, and
+vanished with the fractured wax.
+
+I take advantage of the interruption to open Mr. Vane's mind to the
+reader. First he had been astonished at the freedom of sarcasm these
+people indulged in without quarreling; next at the non-respect of sex.
+
+“So sex is not recognized in this community,” thought he. Then the
+glibness and merit of some of their answers surprised and amused him.
+He, like me, had seldom met an imaginative repartee, except in a play or
+a book. “Society's” repartees were then, as they are now, the good
+old tree in various dresses and veils: _Tu quoque, tu mentiris, vos
+damnemini;_ but he was sick and dispirited on the whole; such very
+bright illusions had been dimmed in these few minutes.
+
+She was brilliant; but her manners, if not masculine, were very daring;
+and yet when she spoke to him, a stranger, how sweet and gentle her
+voice was! Then it was clear nothing but his ignorance could have placed
+her at the summit of her art.
+
+Still he clung to his enthusiasm for her. He drew Pomander aside. “What
+a simplicity there is in Mrs. Woffington!” said he; “the rest, male and
+female, are all so affected; she is so fresh and natural. They are all
+hot-house plants; she is a cowslip with the May dew on it.”
+
+“What you take for simplicity is her refined art,” replied Sir Charles.
+
+“No!” said Vane, “I never saw a more innocent creature!”
+
+Pomander laughed in his face; this laugh disconcerted him more than
+words; he spoke no more--he sat pensive. He was sorry he had come to
+this place, where everybody knew his goddess; yet nobody admired, nobody
+loved, and, alas! nobody respected her.
+
+He was roused from his reverie by a noise; the noise was caused by
+Cibber falling on Garrick, whom Pomander had maliciously quoted against
+all the tragedians of Colley Cibber's day.
+
+“I tell you,” cried the veteran, “that this Garrick has banished dignity
+from the stage and given us in exchange what you and he take for fire;
+but it is smoke and vapor. His manner is little, like his person, it is
+all fuss and bustle. This is his idea of a tragic scene: A little fellow
+comes bustling in, goes bustling about, and runs bustling out.” Here
+Mr. Cibber left the room, to give greater effect to his description, but
+presently returned in a mighty pother, saying: “'Give me another horse!'
+Well, where's the horse? don't you see I'm waiting for him? 'Bind up my
+wounds!' Look sharp now with these wounds. 'Have mercy, Heaven!' but
+be quick about it, for the pit can't wait for Heaven. Bustle! bustle!
+bustle!”
+
+The old dog was so irresistibly funny that the whole company were
+obliged to laugh; but in the midst of their merriment Mrs. Woffington's
+voice was heard at the door.
+
+“This way, madam.”
+
+A clear and somewhat shrill voice replied: “I know the way better than
+you, child;” and a stately old lady appeared on the threshold.
+
+“Bracegirdle,” said Mr. Cibber.
+
+It may well be supposed that every eye was turned on this newcomer--that
+Roxana for whom Mr. Cibber's story had prepared a peculiar interest.
+She was dressed in a rich green velvet gown with gold fringe. Cibber
+remembered it; she had played the “Eastern Queen” in it. Heaven forgive
+all concerned! It was fearfully pinched in at the waist and ribs, so as
+to give the idea of wood inside, not woman.
+
+Her hair and eyebrows were iron-gray, and she had lost a front tooth, or
+she would still have been eminently handsome. She was tall and straight
+as a dart, and her noble port betrayed none of the weakness of age, only
+it was to be seen that her hands were a little weak, and the gold-headed
+crutch struck the ground rather sharply, as if it did a little
+limbs'-duty.
+
+Such was the lady who marched into the middle of the room, with a “How
+do, Colley?” and, looking over the company's heads as if she did not see
+them, regarded the four walls with some interest. Like a cat, she seemed
+to think more of places than of folk. The page obsequiously offered her
+a chair.
+
+“Not so clean as it used to be,” said Mrs. Bracegirdle.
+
+Unfortunately, in making this remark, the old lady graciously patted the
+page's head for offering her the chair; and this action gave, with some
+of the ill-constituted minds that are ever on the titter, a ridiculous
+direction to a remark intended, I believe, for the paint and wanscots,
+etc.
+
+“Nothing is as it used to be,” remarked Mr. Cibber.
+
+“All the better for everything,” said Mrs. Clive.
+
+“We were laughing at this mighty little David, first actor of this
+mighty little age.”
+
+Now if Mr. Cibber thought to find in the newcomer an ally of the past
+in its indiscriminate attack upon the present, he was much mistaken; for
+the old actress made onslaught on this nonsense at once.
+
+“Ay, ay,” said she, “and not the first time by many hundreds. 'Tis
+a disease you have. Cure yourself, Colley. Davy Garrick pleases the
+public; and in trifles like acting, that take nobody to heaven, to
+please all the world, is to be great. Some pretend to higher aims, but
+none have 'em. You may hide this from young fools, mayhap, but not from
+an old 'oman like me. He! he! he! No, no, no--not from an old 'oman like
+me.”
+
+She then turned round in her chair, and with that sudden, unaccountable
+snappishness of tone to which the brisk old are subject, she snarled:
+“Gie me a pinch of snuff, some of ye, do!”
+
+Tobacco dust was instantly at her disposal. She took it with the
+points of her fingers delicately, and divested the crime of half its
+uncleanness and vulgarity--more an angel couldn't.
+
+“Monstrous sensible woman, though!” whispered Quin to Clive.
+
+“Hey, sir! what do you say, sir? for I'm a little deaf.” (Not very to
+praise, it seems.)
+
+“That your judgment, madam, is equal to the reputation of your talent.”
+
+The words were hardly spoken before the old lady rose upright as a
+tower. She then made an oblique preliminary sweep, and came down with
+such a courtesy as the young had never seen.
+
+James Quin, not to disgrace his generation, attempted a corresponding
+bow, for which his figure and apoplectic tendency rendered him unfit;
+and while he was transacting it, the graceful Cibber stepped gravely
+up, and looked down and up the process with his glass, like a naturalist
+inspecting some strange capriccio of an orang-outang. The gymnastics of
+courtesy ended without back-falls--Cibber lowered his tone.
+
+“You are right, Bracy. It is nonsense denying the young fellow's talent;
+but his Othello, now, Bracy! be just--his Othello!”
+
+“Oh, dear! oh, dear!” cried she; “I thought it was Desdemona's little
+black boy come in without the tea-kettle.”
+
+Quin laughed uproariously.
+
+“It made me laugh a deal more than Mr. Quin's Falstaff. Oh, dear! oh,
+dear!”
+
+“Falstaff, indeed! Snuff!” In the tone of a trumpet.
+
+Quin secretly revoked his good opinion of this woman's sense.
+
+“Madam,” said the page, timidly, “if you would but favor us with a
+specimen of the old style--”
+
+“Well, child, why not? Only what makes you mumble like that? but they
+all do it now, I see. Bless my soul! our words used to come out like
+brandy-cherries; but now a sentence is like raspberry-jam, on the stage
+and off.”
+
+Cibber chuckled.
+
+“And why don't you men carry yourself like Cibber here?”
+
+“Don't press that question,” said Colley dryly.
+
+“A monstrous poor actor, though,” said the merciless old woman, in a
+mock aside to the others; “only twenty shillings a week for half his
+life;” and her shoulders went up to her ears--then she fell into a half
+reverie. “Yes, we were distinct,” said she; “but I must own, children,
+we were slow. Once, in the midst of a beautiful tirade, my lover went to
+sleep, and fell against me. A mighty pretty epigram, twenty lines, was
+writ on't by one of my gallants. Have ye as many of them as we used?”
+
+“In that respect,” said the page, “we are not behind our
+great-grandmothers.”
+
+“I call that pert,” said Mrs. Bracegirdle, with the air of one drawing
+scientific distinctions. “Now, is that a boy or a lady that spoke to me
+last?”
+
+“By its dress, I should say a boy,” said Cibber, with his glass; “by its
+assurance, a lady!”
+
+“There's one clever woman among ye; Peg something, plays Lothario, Lady
+Betty Modish, and what not?”
+
+“What! admire Woffington?” screamed Mrs. Clive; “why, she is the
+greatest gabbler on the stage.”
+
+“I don't care,” was the reply, “there's nature about the jade. Don't
+contradict me,” added she, with sudden fury; “a parcel of children.”
+
+“No, madam,” said Clive humbly. “Mr. Cibber, will you try and prevail on
+Mrs. Bracegirdle to favor us with a recitation?”
+
+Cibber handed his cane with pomp to a small actor. Bracegirdle did the
+same; and, striking the attitudes that had passed for heroic in their
+day, they declaimed out of the “Rival Queens” two or three tirades,
+which I graciously spare the reader of this tale. Their elocution was
+neat and silvery; but not one bit like the way people speak in streets,
+palaces, fields, roads and rooms. They had not made the grand discovery,
+which Mr. A. Wigan on the stage, and every man of sense off it, has made
+in our day and nation; namely, that the stage is a representation,
+not of stage, but of life; and that an actor ought to speak and act in
+imitation of human beings, not of speaking machines that have run and
+creaked in a stage groove, with their eyes shut upon the world at large,
+upon nature, upon truth, upon man, upon woman and upon child.
+
+“This is slow,” cried Cibber; “let us show these young people how ladies
+and gentlemen moved fifty years ago, _dansons.”_
+
+A fiddler was caught, a beautiful slow minuet played, and a bit of
+“solemn dancing” done. Certainly it was not gay, but it must be owned
+it was beautiful; it was the dance of kings, the poetry of the courtly
+saloon.
+
+The retired actress, however, had frisker notions left in her. “This is
+slow,” cried she, and bade the fiddler play, “The wind that shakes the
+barley,” an ancient jig tune; this she danced to in a style that utterly
+astounded the spectators.
+
+She showed them what fun was; her feet and her stick were all echoes to
+the mad strain; out went her heel behind, and, returning, drove her four
+yards forward. She made unaccountable slants, and cut them all over in
+turn if they did not jump for it. Roars of inextinguishable laughter
+arose, it would have made an oyster merry. Suddenly she stopped, and put
+her hands to her sides, and soon after she gave a vehement cry of pain.
+
+The laughter ceased.
+
+She gave another cry of such agony that they were all round her in a
+moment.
+
+“Oh, help me, ladies,” screamed the poor woman, in tones as feminine as
+they were heart-rending and piteous. “Oh, my back! my loins! I suffer,
+gentlemen,” said the poor thing, faintly.
+
+What was to be done? Mr. Vane offered his penknife to cut her laces.
+
+“You shall cut my head off sooner,” cried she, with sudden energy.
+“Don't pity me,” said she, sadly, “I don't deserve it;” then, lifting
+her eyes, she exclaimed, with a sad air of self-reproach: “O vanity! do
+you never leave a woman?”
+
+“Nay, madam!” whimpered the page, who was a good-hearted girl; “'twas
+your great complaisance for us, not vanity. Oh! oh! oh!” and she began
+to blubber, to make matters better.
+
+“No, my children,” said the old lady, “'twas vanity. I wanted to show
+you what an old 'oman could do; and I have humiliated myself, trying
+to outshine younger folk. I am justly humiliated, as you see;” and she
+began to cry a little.
+
+“This is very painful,” said Cibber.
+
+Mrs. Bracegirdle now raised her eyes (they had set her in a chair), and
+looking sweetly, tenderly and earnestly on her old companion, she said
+to him, slowly, gently, but impressively “Colley, at threescore years
+and ten this was ill done of us! You and I are here now--for what? to
+cheer the young up the hill we mounted years ago. And, old friend, if we
+detract from them we discourage them. A great sin in the old!”
+
+“Every dog his day.”
+
+“We have had ours.” Here she smiled, then, laying her hand tenderly
+in the old man's, she added, with calm solemnity: “And now we must go
+quietly toward our rest, and strut and fret no more the few last minutes
+of life's fleeting hour.”
+
+How tame my cacotype of these words compared with what they were. I
+am ashamed of them and myself, and the human craft of writing, which,
+though commoner far, is so miserably behind the godlike art of speech:
+_“Si ipsam audivisses!”_
+
+These ink scratches, which, in the imperfection of language, we have
+called words, till the unthinking actually dream they are words, but
+which are the shadows of the corpses of words; these word-shadows then
+were living powers on her lips, and subdued, as eloquence always does,
+every heart within reach of the imperial tongue.
+
+The young loved her, and the old man, softened and vanquished, and
+mindful of his failing life, was silent, and pressed his handkerchief to
+his eyes a moment; then he said:
+
+“No, Bracy, no. Be composed, I pray you. She is right. Young people,
+forgive me that I love the dead too well, and the days when I was what
+you are now. Drat the woman,” continued he, half ashamed of his emotion;
+“she makes us laugh, and makes us cry, just as she used.”
+
+“What does he say, young woman?” said the old lady, dryly, to Mrs.
+Clive.
+
+“He says you make us laugh, and make us cry, madam; and so you do me,
+I'm sure.”
+
+“And that's Peg Woffington's notion of an actress! Better it, Cibber and
+Bracegirdle, if you can,” said the other, rising up like lightning.
+
+She then threw Colley Cibber a note, and walked coolly and rapidly out
+of the room, without looking once behind her.
+
+The rest stood transfixed, looking at one another, and at the empty
+chair. Then Cibber opened and read the note aloud. It was from Mrs.
+Bracegirdle: “Playing at tric-trac; so can't play the fool in your
+green-room to-night. B.”
+
+On this, a musical ringing laugh was heard from outside the door, where
+the pseudo Bracegirdle was washing the gray from her hair, and the
+wrinkles from her face--ah! I wish I could do it as easily!--and the
+little bit of sticking-plaster from her front tooth.
+
+“Why, it is the Irish jade!” roared Cibber.
+
+“Divil a less!” rang back a rich brogue; “and it's not the furst time we
+put the comether upon ye, England, my jewal!”
+
+One more mutual glance, and then the mortal cleverness of all this began
+to dawn on their minds; and they broke forth into clapping of hands, and
+gave this accomplished _mime_ three rounds of applause; Mr. Vane and Sir
+Charles Pomander leading with, “Bravo, Woffington!”
+
+Its effect on Mr. Vane may be imagined. Who but she could have done
+this? This was as if a painter should so paint a man as to deceive his
+species. This was acting, but not like the acting of the stage. He
+was in transports, and self-satisfaction at his own judgment mingled
+pleasantly with his admiration.
+
+In this cheerful exhibition, one joined not--Mr. Cibber. His theories
+had received a shock (and we all love our theories). He himself had
+received a rap--and we don't hate ourselves.
+
+Great is the syllogism! But there is a class of arguments less
+vulnerable.
+
+If A says to B, “You can't hit me, as I prove by this syllogism” (here
+followeth the syllogism), “and B, _pour toute reponse,_ knocks A down
+such a whack that he rebounds into a sitting posture; and to him the
+man, the tree, the lamp-post and the fire-escape become not clearly
+distinguishable; this barbarous logic prevails against the logic in
+Barbara, and the syllogism is in the predicament of Humpty Dumpty. In
+this predicament was the Poet Laureate. The miscreant Proteus (could
+not) escape these chains!” So the miscreant Proteus--no bad name for an
+old actor--took his little cocked hat and marched, a smaller, if not a
+wiser man. Some disjointed words fell from him: “Mimicry is not
+acting,” etc.; and with one bitter, mowing glance at the applauders,
+_circumferens acriter oculos,_ he vanished in the largest pinch of snuff
+on record. The rest dispersed more slowly.
+
+Mr. Vane waited eagerly, and watched the door for Mrs. Woffington; but
+she did not come. He then made acquaintance with good-natured Mr. Quin,
+who took him upon the stage and showed him by what vulgar appliances
+that majestic rise of the curtain he so admired was effected. Returning
+to the green-room for his friend, he found him in animated conversation
+with Mrs. Woffington. This made Vane uneasy.
+
+Sir Charles, up to the present moment of the evening, had been
+unwontedly silent, and now he was talking nineteen to the dozen, and
+Mrs. Woffington was listening with an appearance of interest that sent a
+pang to poor Vane's heart; he begged Mr. Quin to introduce him.
+
+Mr. Quin introduced him.
+
+The lady received his advances with polite composure. Mr. Vane stammered
+his admiration of her Bracegirdle; but all he could find words to say
+was mere general praise, and somewhat coldly received. Sir Charles,
+on the contrary, spoke more like a critic. “Had you given us the stage
+cackle, or any of those traditionary symptoms of old age, we should have
+instantly detected you,” said he; “but this was art copying nature,
+and it may be years before such a triumph of illusion is again effected
+under so many adverse circumstances.”
+
+“You are very good, Sir Charles,” was the reply. “You flatter me. It was
+one of those things which look greater than they are. Nobody here knew
+Bracegirdle but Mr. Cibber; Mr. Cibber cannot see well without his
+glasses, and I got rid of one of the candles; I sent one of the imps of
+the theater to knock it down. I know Mrs. Bracegirdle by heart. I drink
+tea with her every Sunday. I had her dress on, and I gave the old boy
+her words and her way of thinking; it was mere mimicry; it was nothing
+compared with what I once did; but, a-hem!”
+
+“Pray tell us!”
+
+“I am afraid I shall shock your friend. I see he is not a wicked man
+like you, and perhaps does not know what good-for-nothing creatures
+actresses are.”
+
+“He is not so ignorant as he looks,” replied Sir Charles.
+
+“That is not quite the answer I expected, Sir Charles,” replied this
+lively lady; “but it serves me right for fishing on dry land. Well,
+then, you must know a young gentleman courted me. I forget whether I
+liked him or not; but you will fancy I hated him, for I promised to
+marry him. You must understand, gentlemen, that I was sent into the
+world, not to act, which I abominate, but to chronicle small beer and
+teach an army of little brats their letters; so this word 'wife,' and
+that word 'chimney-corner,' took possession of my mind, and a vision of
+darning stockings for a large party, all my own, filled my heart, and
+really I felt quite grateful to the little brute that was to give me all
+this, and he would have had such a wife as men never do have, still less
+deserve. But one fine day that the theater left me time to examine his
+manner toward me, I instantly discovered he was deceiving me. So I had
+him watched, and the little brute was going to marry another woman, and
+break it to me by degrees afterward, etc. You know, Sir Charles? Ah! I
+see you do.
+
+“I found her out; got an introduction to her father; went down to his
+house three days before the marriage, with a little coalblack mustache,
+regimentals, and what not; made up, in short, with the art of my sex,
+gentlemen--and the impudence of yours.
+
+“The first day I flirted and danced with the bride. The second I
+made love to her, and at night I let her know that her intended was a
+villain. I showed her letters of his; protestations, oaths of eternal
+fidelity to one Peg Woffington, 'who will die,' drawled I,' if he
+betrays her.'
+
+“And here, gentlemen, mark the justice of Heaven. I received a
+backhanded slap: 'Peg Woffington! an actress! Oh, the villain!' cried
+she; 'let him marry the little vagabond. How dare he insult me with his
+hand that had been offered in such a quarter?'
+
+“So, in a fit of virtuous indignation, the little hypocrite dismissed
+the little brute; in other words, she had fallen in love with me.
+
+“I have not had many happy hours, but I remember it was delicious to
+look out of my window, and at the same moment smell the honeysuckles and
+see my _perfide_ dismissed under a heap of scorn and a pile of luggage
+he had brought down for his wedding tour.
+
+“I scampered up to London, laughing all the way; and when I got home, if
+I remember right, I cried for two hours. How do you account for that?”
+
+“I hope, madam,” said Vane, gravely, “it was remorse for having trifled
+with that poor young lady's heart; she had never injured you.”
+
+“But, sir, the husband I robbed her of was a brute and a villain in his
+little way, and wicked and good-for-nothing, etc. He would have deceived
+that poor little hypocrite, as he had this one,” pointing to herself.
+
+“That is not what I mean; you inspired her with an attachment, never to
+be forgotten. Poor lady, how many sleepless nights has she passed since
+then, how many times has she strained her eyes to see her angel lover
+returning to her! She will not forget in two years the love it cost you
+but two days to inspire. The powerful should be merciful. Ah! I fear you
+have no heart.”
+
+These words had no sooner burst from Mr. Vane, than he was conscious of
+the strange liberty he had taken, and, indeed, the bad taste he had been
+guilty of; and this feeling was not lessened when he saw Mrs. Woffington
+color up to the temples. Her eyes, too, glittered like basilisks; but
+she said nothing, which was remarkable in her, whose tongue was the
+sword of a _maitre d'armes._
+
+Sir Charles eyed his friend in a sly, satirical manner; he then said,
+laughingly: “In two months _she married a third!_ don't waste your
+sympathy,” and turned the talk into another channel; and soon after,
+Mrs. Woffington's maid appearing at the door, she courtesied to both
+gentlemen and left the theater. Sir Charles Pomander accompanied Mr.
+Vane a little way.
+
+“What becomes of her innocence?” was his first word.
+
+“One loses sight of it in her immense talent,” said the lover.
+
+“She certainly is clever in all that bears upon her business,” was the
+reply; “but I noticed you were a little shocked with her indelicacy in
+telling us that story, and still more in having it to tell.”
+
+“Indelicacy? No!” said Vane; “the little brute deserved it. Good
+Heavens! to think that 'a little brute' might have married that angel,
+and actually broke faith to lose her; it is incredible, the crime is
+diluted by the absurdity.”
+
+“Have you heard him tell the story? No? Then take my word for it, you
+have not heard the facts of the case.”
+
+“Ah! you are prejudiced against her?”
+
+“On the contrary, I like her. But I know that with all women the present
+lover is an angel and the past a demon, and so on in turn. And I know
+that if Satan were to enter the women of the stage, with the wild idea
+of impairing their veracity, he would come out of their minds a greater
+liar than he went in, and the innocent darlings would never know their
+spiritual father had been at them.”
+
+Doubtful whether this sentiment and period could be improved, Sir
+Charles parted with his friend, leaving his sting in him like a friend;
+the other's reflections as he sauntered home were not strictly those of
+a wise, well-balanced mind; they ran in this style:
+
+“When she said, 'Is not that to praise my person at the expense of my
+wit?' I ought to have said, 'Nay, madam; could your wit disguise your
+person, it would betray itself, so you would still shine confessed;' and
+instead of that I said nothing!”
+
+He then ran over in his mind all the opportunities he had had
+for putting in something smart, and bitterly regretted those lost
+opportunities; and made the smart things, and beat the air with them.
+Then his cheeks tingled when he remembered that he had almost scolded
+her; and he concocted a very different speech, and straightway repeated
+it in imagination.
+
+This is lovers' pastime; I own it funny; but it is open to one
+objection, this single practice of sitting upon eggs no longer
+chickenable, carried to a habit, is capable of turning a solid intellect
+into a liquid one, and ruining a mind's career.
+
+We leave Mr. Vane, therefore, with a hope that he will not do it every
+night; and we follow his friend to the close of our chapter.
+
+Hey for a definition!
+
+What is diplomacy? Is it folly in a coat that looks like sagacity? Had
+Sir Charles Pomander, instead of watching Mr. Vane and Mrs. Woffington,
+asked the former whether he admired the latter, and whether the latter
+responded, straightforward Vane would have told him the whole truth in a
+minute. Diplomacy therefore was, as it often is, a waste of time.
+
+But diplomacy did more in this case, it _sapienter descendebat in
+fossam;_ it fell on its nose with gymnastic dexterity, as it generally
+does, upon my word.
+
+To watch Mrs. Woffington's face _vis-a-vis_ Mr. Vane, Pomander
+introduced Vane to the green-room of the Theater Royal, Covent Garden.
+By this Pomander learned nothing, because Mrs. Woffington had, with a
+wonderful appearance of openness, the closest face in Europe when she
+chose.
+
+On the other hand, by introducing this country gentleman to this
+green-room, he gave a mighty impulse and opportunity to Vane's love;
+an opportunity which he forgot the timid, inexperienced Damon might
+otherwise never have found.
+
+Here diplomacy was not policy, for, as my sagacious reader has perhaps
+divined, Sir Charles Pomander _was after her himself._
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+YES, Sir Charles was _after_ Mrs. Woffington. I use that phrase because
+it is a fine generic one, suitable to different kinds of love-making.
+
+Mr. Vane's sentiments were an inexplicable compound; but respect,
+enthusiasm, and deep admiration were the uppermost.
+
+The good Sir Charles was no enigma. He had a vacancy in his
+establishment--a very high situation, too, for those who like that sort
+of thing--the head of his table, his left hand when he drove in the
+Park, etc. To this he proposed to promote Mrs. Woffington. She was
+handsome and witty, and he liked her. But that was not what caused him
+to pursue her; slow, sagacious, inevitable as a beagle.
+
+She was celebrated, and would confer great _eclat_ on him. The scandal
+of possessing her was a burning temptation. Women admire celebrity in a
+man; but men adore it in a woman.
+
+“The world,” says Philip, “is a famous man; What will not women love so
+taught?”
+
+I will try to answer this question.
+
+The women will more readily forgive disgusting physical deformity for
+Fame's sake than we. They would embrace with more rapture a famous
+orang-outang than we an illustrious chimpanzee; but when it comes to
+moral deformity the tables are turned.
+
+Had the queen pardoned Mr. Greenacre and Mrs. Manning, would the great
+rush have been on the hero, or the heroine? Why, on Mrs. Macbeth! To her
+would the blackguards have brought honorable proposals, and the gentry
+liberal ones.
+
+Greenacre would have found more female admirers than I ever shall; but
+the grand stream of sexual admiration would have set Mariaward. This
+fact is as dark as night; but it is as sure as the sun.
+
+The next day “the friends” (most laughable of human substantives!) met
+in the theater, and again visited the green-room; and this time Vane
+determined to do himself more justice. He was again disappointed; the
+actress's manner was ceremoniously polite. She was almost constantly on
+the stage, and in a hurry when off it; and, when there was a word to be
+got with her the ready, glib Sir Charles was sure to get it. Vane could
+not help thinking it hard that a man who professed no respect for her
+should thus keep the light from him; and he could hardly conceal his
+satisfaction when Pomander, at night, bade him farewell for a fortnight.
+Pressing business took Sir Charles into the country.
+
+The good Sir Charles, however, could not go without leaving his sting
+behind as a companion to his friend. He called on Mr. Vane and after a
+short preface, containing the words “our friendship,” “old kindness,”
+ “my greater experience,” he gravely warned him against Mrs. Woffington.
+
+“Not that I would say this if you could take her for what she is, and
+amuse yourself with her as she will with you, if she thinks it worth her
+while. But I see you have a heart, and she will make a football of it,
+and torment you beyond all you have ever conceived of human anguish.”
+
+Mr. Vane colored high, and was about to interrupt the speaker; but he
+continued:
+
+“There, I am in a hurry. But ask Quin, or anybody who knows her history,
+you will find she has had scores of lovers, and no one remains her
+friend after they part.”
+
+“Men are such villains!”
+
+“Very likely,” was the reply; “but twenty men don't ill-use one good
+woman; those are not the proportions. Adieu!”
+
+This last hit frightened Mr. Vane, he began to look into himself; he
+could not but feel that he was a mere child in this woman's hands; and,
+more than that, his conscience told him that if his heart should be made
+a football of it would be only a just and probable punishment. For there
+were particular reasons why he, of all men, had no business to look
+twice at any woman whose name was Woffington.
+
+That night he avoided the green-room, though he could not forego the
+play; but the next night he determined to stay at home altogether.
+Accordingly, at five o'clock, the astounded box-keeper wore a visage of
+dismay--there was no shilling for him! and Mr. Vane's nightly shilling
+had assumed the sanctity of salary in his mind.
+
+Mr. Vane strolled disconsolate; he strolled by the Thames, he strolled
+up and down the Strand; and, finally, having often admired the wisdom
+of moths in their gradual approach to what is not good for them, he
+strolled into the green-room, Covent Garden, and sat down. When there
+he did not feel happy. Besides, she had always been cold to him, and had
+given no sign of desiring his acquaintance, still less of recognition.
+
+Mr. Vane had often seen a weathercock at work, and he had heard a woman
+compared to it; but he had never realized the simplicity, beauty and
+justice of the simile. He was therefore surprised, as well as thrilled,
+when Mrs. Woffington, so cool, ceremonious and distant hitherto, walked
+up to him in the green-room with a face quite wreathed in smiles, and,
+without preliminary, thanked him for all the beautiful flowers he had
+sent her.
+
+“What, Mrs. Woffington--what, you recognize me?”
+
+“Of course, and have been foolish enough to feel quite supported by the
+thought I had at least one friend in the house. But,” said she, looking
+down, “now you must not be angry; here are some stones that have fallen
+somehow among the flowers. I am going to give you them back, because I
+value flowers, so I cannot have them mixed with anything else; but don't
+ask me for a flower back,” added she, seeing the color mount on his
+face, “for I would not give one of them to you, or anybody.”
+
+Imagine the effect of this on a romantic disposition like Mr. Vane's.
+
+He told her how glad he was that she could distinguish his features amid
+the crowd of her admirers; he confessed he had been mortified when he
+found himself, as he thought, entirely a stranger to her.
+
+She interrupted him.
+
+“Do you know your friend Sir Charles Pomander? No! I am almost sure you
+do; well, he is a man I do not like. He is deceitful, besides he is a
+wicked man. There, to be plain with you, he was watching me all that
+night, the first time you came here, and, because I saw he was watching
+me I would not know who you were, nor anything about you.”
+
+“But you looked as if you had never seen me before.”
+
+“Of course I did, when I had made up my mind to,” said the actress,
+naively.
+
+“Sir Charles has left London for a fortnight, so, if he is the only
+obstacle, I hope you will know me every night.”
+
+“Why, you sent me no flowers yesterday or to-day.”
+
+“But I will to-morrow.”
+
+“Then I am sure I shall know your face again; good-by. Won't you see me
+in the last act, and tell me how ill I do it?”
+
+“Oh, yes!” and he hurried to his box, and so the actress secured one
+pair of hands for her last act.
+
+He returned to the green-room, but she did not revisit that verdant
+bower. The next night, after the usual compliments, she said to him,
+looking down with a sweet, engaging air:
+
+“I sent a messenger into the country to know about that lady.”
+
+“What lady?” said Vane, scarcely believing his senses.
+
+“That you were so unkind to me about.”
+
+“I, unkind to you? what a brute I must be!”
+
+“My meaning is, you justly rebuked me, only you should not tell an
+actress she has no heart--that is always understood. Well, Sir Charles
+Pomander said she married a third in two months!”
+
+“And did she?”
+
+“No, it was in six weeks; that man never tells the truth; and since then
+she has married a fourth.”
+
+“I am glad of it!”
+
+“So am I, since you awakened my conscience.”
+
+Delicious flattery! and of all flattery the sweetest, when a sweet
+creature does flattery, not merely utters it.
+
+After this, Vane made no more struggles; he surrendered himself to the
+charming seduction, and as his advances were respectful, but ardent and
+incessant, he found himself at the end of a fortnight Mrs. Woffington's
+professed lover.
+
+They wrote letters to each other every day. On Sunday they went to
+church together in the morning, and spent the afternoon in the suburbs
+wherever grass was and dust was not.
+
+In the next fortnight, poor Vane thought he had pretty well fathomed
+this extraordinary woman's character. Plumb the Atlantic with an
+eighty-fathom line, sir!
+
+“She is religious,” said he, “she loves a church much better than a
+playhouse, and she never laughs nor goes to sleep in church as I do. And
+she is breaking me of swearing--by degrees. She says that no fashion can
+justify what is profane, and that it must be vulgar as well as wicked.
+And she is frankness and simplicity itself.”
+
+Another thing that charmed him was her disinterestedness. She ordered
+him to buy her a present every day, but it was never to cost above a
+shilling. If an article could be found that cost exactly tenpence (a
+favorite sum of hers), she was particularly pleased, and these shilling
+presents were received with a flush of pleasure and brightening eyes.
+But when one day he appeared with a diamond necklace, it was taken very
+coldly, he was not even thanked for it, and he was made to feel, once
+for all, that the tenpenny ones were the best investments toward her
+favor.
+
+Then he found out that she was very prudent and rather stingy; of
+Spartan simplicity in her diet, and a scorner of dress off the stage.
+To redeem this she was charitable, and her charity and her economy
+sometimes had a sore fight, during which she was peevish, poor little
+soul.
+
+One day she made him a request.
+
+“I can't bear you should think me worse than I am, and I don't want you
+to think me better than I am.”
+
+Vane trembled.
+
+“But don't speak to others about me; promise, and I will promise to tell
+you my whole story, whenever you are entitled to such a confidence.
+
+“When shall I be entitled to it?”
+
+“When I am sure you love me.”
+
+“Do you doubt that now?”
+
+“Yes! I think you love me, but I am not sure.
+
+“Margaret, remember I have known you much longer than you have known me.
+
+“No!”
+
+“Yes! Two months before we ever spoke I lived upon your face and voice.
+
+“That is to say you looked from your box at me upon the stage, and did
+not I look from the stage at you?”
+
+“Never! you always looked at the pit, and my heart used to sink.”
+
+“On the 17th of May you first came into that box. I noticed you a
+little, the next day I noticed you a little more; I saw you fancied you
+liked me, after a while I could not have played without you.”
+
+Here was delicious flattery again, and poor Vane believed every word of
+it.
+
+As for her request and her promise, she showed her wisdom in both these.
+As Sir Charles observed, it is a wonderful point gained if you allow a
+woman to tell her story her own way.
+
+How the few facts that are allowed to remain get molded and twisted out
+of ugly forms into pretty shapes by those supple, dexterous fingers!
+
+This present story cannot give the life of Mrs. Woffington, but only one
+great passage therein, as do the epic and dramatic writers; but since
+there was often great point in any sentences spoken on important
+occasions by this lady, I will just quote her defense of herself. The
+reader may be sure she did not play her weakest card; let us give her
+the benefit.
+
+One day she and Kitty Clive were at it ding-dong; the green-room was
+full of actors, male and female, but there were no strangers, and the
+ladies were saying things which the men of this generation only think;
+at last Mrs. Woffington finding herself roughly, and, as she thought,
+unjustly handled, turned upon the assembly and said: “What man did ever
+I ruin in all my life? Speak who can!”
+
+And there was a dead silence.
+
+“What woman is there here at as much as three pounds per week even, that
+hasn't ruined two at the very least?”
+
+Report says there was a dead silence again, until Mrs. Clive perked up,
+and said she had only ruined one, and that was his own fault!
+
+Mrs. Woffington declined to attach weight to this example. “Kitty Clive
+is the hook without the bait,” said she; and the laugh turned, as it
+always did, against Peggy's antagonist.
+
+Thus much was speedily shown to Mr. Vane, that, whatever were Mrs.
+Woffington's intentions toward him, interest had at present nothing to
+do with them; indeed it was made clear that even were she to surrender
+her liberty to him, it would only be as a princess, forging golden
+chains for herself with her own royal hand.
+
+Another fortnight passed to the mutual satisfaction of the lovers. To
+Vane it was a dream of rapture to be near this great creature, whom
+thousands admired at such a distance; to watch over her, to take her to
+the theater in a warm shawl, to stand at the wing and receive her as she
+came radiant from her dressing-room, to watch her from her rear as
+she stood like some power about to descend on the stage, to see her
+falcon-like stoop upon the said stage, and hear the burst of applause
+that followed, as the report does the flash; to compare this with the
+spiritless crawl with which common artists went on, tame from their
+first note to their last; to take her hand when she came off, feel how
+her nerves were strung like a greyhound's after a race, and her whole
+frame in a high even glow, with the great Pythoness excitement of art.
+
+And to have the same great creature leaning her head on his shoulder,
+and listening with a charming complacency, while he purred to her of
+love and calm delights, alternate with still greater triumphs; for he
+was to turn dramatic writer, for her sake, was to write plays, a woman
+the hero, and love was to inspire him, and passion supply the want of
+pencraft. (You make me laugh, Mr. Vane!)
+
+All this was heavenly.
+
+And then with all her dash, and fire, and bravado, she was a thorough
+woman.
+
+“Margaret!”
+
+“Ernest!”
+
+“I want to ask you a question. Did you really cry because that Miss
+Bellamy had dresses from Paris?”
+
+“It does not seem very likely.”
+
+“No, but tell me; did you?”
+
+“Who said I did?”
+
+“Mr. Cibber.”
+
+“Old fool!”
+
+“Yes, but did you?”
+
+“Did I what?”
+
+“Cry!”
+
+“Ernest, the minx's dresses were beautiful.”
+
+“No doubt. But did you cry?”
+
+“And mine were dirty; I don't care about gilt rags, but dirty dresses,
+ugh!”
+
+“Tell me, then.”
+
+“Tell you what?”
+
+“Did you cry or not?”
+
+“Ah! he wants to find out whether I am a fool, and despise me.”
+
+“No, I think I should love you better. For hitherto I have seen no
+weakness in you, and it makes me uncomfortable.”
+
+“Be comforted! Is it not a weakness to like you!”
+
+“You are free from that weakness, or you would gratify my curiosity.”
+
+“Be pleased to state, in plain, intelligible English, what you require
+of me.”
+
+“I want to know, in one word, did you cry or not?”
+
+“Promise to tease me no more then, and I'll tell you.”
+
+“I promise.”
+
+“You won't despise me?”
+
+“Despise you! of course not.”
+
+“Well, then--I don't remember!”
+
+On another occasion they were seated in the dusk, by the side of the
+canal in the Park, when a little animal began to potter about on an
+adjacent bank.
+
+Mrs. Woffington contemplated it with curiosity and delight.
+
+“Oh, you pretty creature!” said she. “Now you are a rabbit; at least, I
+think so.”
+
+“No,” said Vane, innocently; “that is a rat.”
+
+“Ah! ah! ah!” screamed Mrs. Woffington, and pinched his arm. This
+frightened the rat, who disappeared. She burst out laughing: “There's a
+fool! The thing did not frighten me, and the name did. Depend upon it,
+it's true what they say--that off the stage, I am the greatest fool
+there is. I'll never be so absurd again. Ah! ah! ah! here it is again”
+ (scream and pinch, as before). “Do take me from this horrid place, where
+monsters come from the great deep.”
+
+And she flounced away, looking daggers askant at the place the rat had
+vacated in equal terror.
+
+All this was silly, but it pleases us men, and contrast is so charming!
+This same fool was brimful of talent--and cunning, too, for that matter.
+
+She played late that night, and Mr. Vane saw the same creature, who
+dared not stay where she was liable to a distant rat, spring upon the
+stage as a gay rake, and flash out her rapier, and act valor's king to
+the life, and seem ready to eat up everybody, King Fear included; and
+then, after her brilliant sally upon the public, Sir Harry Wildair came
+and stood beside Mr. Vane. Her bright skin, contrasted with her powdered
+periwig, became dazzling. She used little rouge, but that little made
+her eyes two balls of black lightning. From her high instep to
+her polished forehead, all was symmetry. Her leg would have been a
+sculptor's glory; and the curve from her waist to her knee was Hogarth's
+line itself.
+
+She stood like Mercury new lighted on a heaven-kissing hill. She placed
+her foot upon the ground, as she might put a hand upon her lover's
+shoulder. We indent it with our eleven undisguised stone.
+
+Such was Sir Harry Wildair, who stood by Mr. Vane, glittering with
+diamond buckles, gorgeous with rich satin breeches, velvet coat,
+ruffles, _pictcae vestis et auri;_ and as she bent her long eye-fringes
+down on him (he was seated), all her fiery charms gradually softened and
+quivered down to womanhood.
+
+“The first time I was here,” said Vane, “my admiration of you broke out
+to Mr. Cibber; and what do you think he said?”
+
+“That you praised me, for me to hear you. Did you?”
+
+“Acquit me of such meanness.”
+
+“Forgive me. It is just what I should have done, had I been courting an
+actress.”
+
+“I think you have not met many ingenuous spirits, dear friend.”
+
+“Not one, my child.”
+
+This was a phrase she often applied to him now.
+
+“The old fellow pretended to hear what I said, too; and I am sure you
+did not--did you?”
+
+“Guess.”
+
+“I guess not.”
+
+“I am afraid I must plead guilty. An actress's ears are so quick to hear
+praise, to tell you the truth, I did catch a word or two, and, 'It told,
+sir--it told.'”
+
+“You alarm me! At this rate, I shall never know what you see, hear or
+think, by your face.”
+
+“When you want to know anything, ask me, and I will tell you; but nobody
+else shall learn anything, nor even you, any other way.”
+
+“Did you hear the feeble tribute of praise I was paying you, when you
+came in?” inquired Vane.
+
+“No. You did not say that my voice had the compass and variety of
+nature, and my movements were free and beautiful, while the others when
+in motion were stilts, and coffee-pots when in repose, did you?”
+
+“Something of the sort, I believe,” cried Vane, laughing.
+
+“I melted from one fine statue into another, I restored the Antinous
+to his true sex.--Goose!--Painters might learn their art from me (in
+my dressing-room, no doubt), and orators revive at my lips the music
+of Athens, that quelled mad mobs and princes drunk with victory.--Silly
+fellow!--Praise was never so sweet to me,” murmured she, inclining like
+a goddess of love toward him; and he fastened on two velvet lips, that
+did not shun the sweet attack, but gently parted with a heavenly sigh;
+while her heaving bosom and yielding frame and swimming eyes confessed
+her conqueror.
+
+That morning Mr. Vane had been dispirited, and apparently
+self-discontented; but at night he went home in a state of mental
+intoxication. His poetic enthusiasm, his love, his vanity, were all
+gratified at once. And all these, singly, have conquered Prudence and
+Virtue a million times.
+
+She had confessed to him that she was disposed to risk her happiness
+on him; she had begged him to submit to a short probation; and she had
+promised, if her confidence and esteem remained unimpaired at the close
+of that period--which was not to be an unhappy one--to take advantage of
+the summer holidays, and cross the water with him, and forget everything
+in the world with him, but love.
+
+How was it that the very next morning clouds chased one another across
+his face? Was it that men are happy but while the chase is doubtful?
+Was it the letter from Pomander announcing his return, and sneeringly
+inquiring whether he was still the dupe of Peg Woffington? or was it
+that same mysterious disquiet which attacked him periodically, and then
+gave way for a while to pleasure and her golden dreams?
+
+The next day was to be a day of delight. He was to entertain her at his
+own house; and, to do her honor, he had asked Mr. Cibber, Mr. Quin and
+other actors, critics, etc.
+
+Our friend, Sir Charles Pomander, had been guilty of two ingenuities:
+first, he had written three or four letters, full of respectful
+admiration, to Mrs. Woffington, of whom he spoke slightingly to Vane;
+second, he had made a disingenuous purchase.
+
+This purchase was Pompey, Mrs. Woffington's little black slave. It is
+a horrid fact, but Pompey did not love his mistress. He was a little
+enamored of her, as small boys are apt to be, but, on the whole, a
+sentiment of hatred slightly predominated in his little black bosom.
+
+It was not without excuse.
+
+This lady was subject to two unpleasant companions--sorrow and
+bitterness. About twice a week she would cry for two hours; and after
+this class of fit she generally went abroad, and made a round of certain
+poor or sick _proteges_ she had, and returned smiling and cheerful.
+
+But other twice a week she might be seen to sit upon her chair,
+contracted into half her size, and looking daggers at the universe in
+general, the world in particular; and on these occasions, it must be
+owned, she stayed at home, and sometimes whipped Pompey.
+
+Pompey had not the sense to reflect that he ought to have been whipped
+every day, or the _esprit de corps_ to be consoled by observing that
+this sort of thing did his mistress good. What he felt was, that his
+mistress, who did everything well, whipped him with energy and skill; it
+did not take ten seconds, but still, in that brief period, Pompey found
+himself dusted and polished off.
+
+The sacred principle of justice was as strong in Mrs. Woffington as in
+the rest of her sex; she had not one grain of it. When she was not
+in her tantrums, the mischievous imp was as sacred from check or
+remonstrance as a monkey or a lap-dog; and several female servants left
+the house on his account.
+
+But Nemesis overtook him in the way we have hinted, and it put his
+little black pipe out.
+
+The lady had taken him out of great humanity; he was fed like a
+game-cock, and dressed like a Barbaric prince; and once when he was ill
+his mistress watched him, and nursed him, and tended him with the same
+white hand that plied the obnoxious whip; and when he died, she alone
+withheld her consent from his burial, and this gave him a chance black
+boys never get, and he came to again; but still these tarnation lickings
+“stuck in him gizzard.” So when Sir Charles's agent proposed to him
+certain silver coins, cheap at a little treachery, the ebony ape
+grinned till he turned half ivory, and became a spy in the house of his
+mistress.
+
+The reader will have gathered that the good Sir Charles had been
+quietly in London some hours before he announced himself as _paulo post
+futurum._
+
+Diamond cut diamond; a diplomat stole this march upon an actress, and
+took her black pawn. One for Pomander! (Gun.)
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+TRIPLET, the Cerberus of art, who had the first bark in this legend,
+and has since been out of hearing, ran from Lambeth to Covent Garden,
+on receipt of Mr. Vane's note. But ran he never so quick, he had built a
+full-sized castle in the air before he reached Bow Street.
+
+The letter hinted at an order upon his muse for amatory verse;
+delightful task, cheering prospect.
+
+Bid a man whose usual lot it is to break stones for the parish at
+tenpence the cubic yard--bid such an one play at marbles with some stone
+taws for half an hour per day, and pocket one pound one--bid a poor
+horse who has drawn those stones about, and browsed short grass by the
+wayside--bid him canter a few times round a grassy ring, and then go
+to his corn--in short, bid Rosinante change with Pegasus, and you do no
+more than Mr. Vane's letter held out to Triplet.
+
+The amatory verse of that day was not up-hill work. There was a
+beaten track on a dead level, and you followed it. You told the tender
+creature, with a world of circumlocution, that, “without joking now,”
+ she was a leper, ditto a tigress, item marble. You next feigned a lucid
+interval, and to be on the point of detesting your monster, but in
+twenty more verses love became, as usual, stronger than reason, and you
+wound up your rotten yarn thus:
+
+You hugged a golden chain. You drew deeper into your wound a barbed
+shaft, like--(any wild animal will do, no one of them is such an ass,
+so you had an equal title to all). And on looking back you saw with
+horrible complacency that you had inflicted one hundred locusts, five
+feet long, upon oppressed humanity.
+
+Wont to travel over acres of canvas for a few shillings, and roods of
+paper on bare speculation, Triplet knew he could make a thousand a year
+at the above work without thinking.
+
+He came therefore to the box-keeper with his eyes glittering.
+
+“Mr. Vane?”
+
+“Just gone out with a gentleman.”
+
+“I'll wait then.”
+
+Now Mr. Vane, we know, was in the green-room, and went home by the
+stage-door. The last thing he thought of was poor Triplet; the rich do
+not dream how they disappoint the poor. Triplet's castle fell as many a
+predecessor had. When the lights were put out, he left the theater with
+a bitter sigh.
+
+“If this gentleman knew how many sweet children I have, and what a good,
+patient, suffering wife, sure he would not have chosen me to make a fool
+of!” said the poor fellow to himself.
+
+In Bow Street, he turned, and looked back upon the theater. How gloomy
+and grand it loomed!
+
+“Ah!” thought he, “if I could but conquer you; and why not? All history
+shows that nothing is unconquerable except perseverance. Hannibal
+conquered the Alps, and I'll conquer you,” cried Triplet, firmly. “Yes,
+this visit is not lost; here I register a vow: I will force my way into
+that mountain of masonry, or perish in the attempt.”
+
+Triplet's most unpremeditated thoughts and actions often savored
+ridiculously of the sublime. Then and there, gazing with folded arms
+on this fortress of Thespis, the polytechnic man organized his first
+assault. The next evening he made it.
+
+Five months previously he had sent the manager three great, large
+tragedies. He knew the aversion a theatrical manager has to read a
+manuscript play, not recommended by influential folk; an aversion which
+always has been carried to superstition. So he hit on the following
+scheme:
+
+He wrote Mr. Rich a letter; in this he told Mr. Rich that he (Triplet)
+was aware what a quantity of trash is offered every week to a manager,
+how disheartening it must be to read it at all, and how natural, after a
+while, to read none. Therefore, he (Triplet) had provided that Mr.
+Rich might economize his time, and yet not remain in ignorance of the
+dramatic treasure that lay ready to his hand.
+
+“The soul of a play,” continued Triplet, “is the plot or fable. A
+gentleman of your experience can decide at once whether a plot or story
+is one to take the public!”
+
+So then he drew out, in full, the three plots. He wrote these plots in
+verse! Heaven forgive us all, he really did. There were also two margins
+left; on one, which was narrow, he jotted down the _locale_ per page of
+the most brilliant passages; on the other margin, which was as wide as
+the column of the plot, he made careful drawings of the personages in
+the principal dramatic situations; scrolls issued from their mouths,
+on which were written the words of fire that were flowing from each in
+these eruptions of the dramatic action. All was referred to pages in the
+manuscripts.
+
+“By this means, sir,” resumed the latter, “you will gut my fish in
+a jiffy; permit me to recall that expression, with apologies for my
+freedom. I would say, you will, in a few minutes of your valuable
+existence, skim the cream of Triplet.”
+
+This author's respect for the manager's time carried him into further
+and unusual details.
+
+“Breakfast,” said he, “is a quiet meal. Let me respectfully suggest,
+that by placing one of my plots on the table, with, say, the sugar-basin
+upon it (this, again, is a mere suggestion), and the play it appertains
+to on your other side, you can readily judge my work without disturbing
+the avocations of the day, and master a play in the twinkling of a
+teacup; forgive my facetiousness. This day month, at ten of the clock, I
+shall expect,” said Triplet, with sudden severity, “sir, your decision!”
+
+Then, gliding back to the courtier, he formally disowned all special
+title to the consideration he expected from Mr. Rich's well-known
+courtesy; still he begged permission to remind that gentleman that he
+had, six years ago, painted for him a large scene, illuminated by two
+great poetical incidents: a red sun, of dimensions never seen out of
+doors in this or any country; and an ocean of sand, yellower than up to
+that time had been attained in art or nature; and that once, when the
+audience, late in the evening, had suddenly demanded a popular song from
+Mr. Nokes, he (Triplet), seeing the orchestra thinned by desertion, and
+nugatory by intoxication, had started from the pit, resuscitated with
+the whole contents of his snuff-box the bass fiddle, snatched the
+leader's violin, and carried Mr. Nokes triumphantly through; that
+thunders of applause had followed, and Mr. Nokes had kindly returned
+thanks _for both;_ but that he (Triplet) had hastily retired to evade
+the manager's acknowledgments, preferring to wait an opportunity like
+the present, when both interests could be conciliated, etc.
+
+This letter he posted at its destination, to save time, and returned
+triumphant home. He had now forgiven and almost forgotten Vane; and had
+reflected that, after all, the drama was his proper walk.
+
+“My dear,” said he to Mrs. Triplet, “this family is on the eve of a
+great triumph!” Then, inverting that order of the grandiloquent and the
+homely which he invented in our first chapter, he proceeded to say: “I
+have reared in a single day a new avenue by which histrionic greatness,
+hitherto obstructed, may become accessible. Wife, I think I have done
+the trick at last. Lysimachus!” added he, “let a libation be poured out
+on so smiling an occasion, and a burnt-offering rise to propitiate the
+celestial powers. Run to the 'Sun,' you dog. Three pennyworth of ale,
+and a hap'orth o' tobacco.”
+
+Ere the month was out, I am sorry to say, the Triplets were reduced to
+a state of beggary. Mrs. Triplet's health had long been failing; and,
+although her duties at her little theater were light and occasional, the
+manager was obliged to discharge her, since she could not be depended
+upon.
+
+The family had not enough to eat! Think of that! They were not warm at
+night, and they felt gnawing and faintness often by day. Think of that!
+
+Fortune was unjust here. The man was laughable, and a goose; and had no
+genius either for writing, painting, or acting; but in that he resembled
+most writers, painters, and actors of his own day and ours. He was
+not beneath the average of what men call art, and it is art's
+antipodes--treadmill artifice.
+
+Other fluent ninnies shared gain, and even fame, and were called
+'penmen,' in Triplet's day. Other ranters were quietly getting rich by
+noise. Other liars and humbugs were painting out o' doors indoors, and
+eating mutton instead of thistles for drenched stinging-nettles,
+yclept trees; for block-tin clouds; for butlers' pantry seas, and
+garret-conceived lakes; for molten sugar-candy rivers; for airless
+atmosphere and sunless air; for carpet nature, and cold, dead fragments
+of an earth all soul and living glory to every cultivated eye but a
+routine painter's. Yet the man of many such mediocrities could not keep
+the pot boiling. We suspect that, to those who would rise in life,
+even strong versatility is a very doubtful good, and weak versatility
+ruination.
+
+At last, the bitter, weary month was gone, and Triplet's eye brightened
+gloriously. He donned his best suit; and, while tying his cravat,
+lectured his family. First, he complimented them upon their deportment
+in adversity; hinted that moralists, not experience, had informed him
+prosperity was far more trying to the character. Put them all solemnly
+on their guard down to Lucy, _aetat_ five, that they were _morituri_ and
+_ae,_ and must be pleased to abstain from “insolent gladness” upon his
+return.
+
+“Sweet are the uses of adversity!” continued this cheerful monitor.
+“If we had not been hard up this while, we should not come with a full
+relish to meat three times a week, which, unless I am an ass (and
+I don't see myself in that light),” said Triplet dryly, “will, I
+apprehend, be, after this day, the primary condition of our future
+existence.”
+
+“James, take the picture with you,” said Mrs. Triplet, in one of those
+calm, little, desponding voices that fall upon the soul so agreeably
+when one is a cock-a-hoop, and desires, with permission, so to remain.
+
+“What on earth am I to take Mrs. Woffington's portrait for?”
+
+“We have nothing in the house,” said the wife, blushing.
+
+Triplet's eye glittered like a rattlesnake's.
+
+“The intimation is eccentric,” said he. “Are you mad, Jane? Pray,”
+ continued he, veiling his wrath in scornful words, “is it requisite,
+heroic, or judicious on the eve, or more correctly the morn, of
+affluence to deposit an unfinished work of art with a mercenary
+relation? Hang it, Jane! would you really have me pawn Mrs. Woffington
+to-day?”
+
+“James,” said Jane steadily, “the manager may disappoint you, we have
+often been disappointed; so take the picture with you. They will give
+you ten shillings on it.”
+
+Triplet was one of those who see things roseate, Mrs. Triplet lurid.
+
+“Madam,” said the poet, “for the first time in our conjugal career, your
+commands deviate so entirely from reason that I respectfully withdraw
+that implicit obedience which has hitherto constituted my principal
+reputation. I'm hanged if I do it, Jane!”
+
+“Dear James, to oblige me!”
+
+“That alters the case; you confess it is unreasonable?”
+
+“Oh, yes! it is only to oblige me.
+
+“Enough!” said Triplet, whose tongue was often a flail that fell on
+friend, foe and self indiscriminately. “Allow it to be unreasonable, and
+I do it as a matter of course--to please you, Jane.”
+
+Accordingly the good soul wrapped it in green baize; but to relieve his
+mind he was obliged to get behind his wife, and shrug his shoulders to
+Lysimachus and the eldest girl, as who should say _voila bien une femme
+votre mere a vous!_
+
+At last he was off, in high spirits. He reached Covent Garden at
+half-past ten, and there the poor fellow was sucked into our narrative
+whirlpool.
+
+We must, however, leave him for a few minutes.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+SIR CHARLES POMANDER was detained in the country much longer than he
+expected.
+
+He was rewarded by a little adventure. As he cantered up to London with
+two servants and a post-boy, all riding on horses ordered in relays
+beforehand, he came up with an antediluvian coach, stuck fast by the
+road-side. Looking into the window, with the humane design of quizzing
+the elders who should be there, he saw a young lady of surpassing
+beauty. This altered the case; Sir Charles instantly drew bridle and
+offered his services.
+
+The lady thanked him, and being an innocent country lady, she opened
+those sluices, her eyes, and two tears gently trickled down, while she
+told him how eager she was to reach London, and how mortified at this
+delay.
+
+The good Sir Charles was touched. He leaped his horse over a hedge,
+galloped to a farm-house in sight, and returned with ropes and rustics.
+These and Sir Charles's horses soon drew the coach out of some stiffish
+clay.
+
+The lady thanked him, and thanked him, and thanked him, with heightening
+color and beaming eyes, and he rode away like a hero.
+
+Before he had gone five miles he became thoughtful and
+self-dissatisfied, finally his remorse came to a head; he called to him
+the keenest of his servants, Hunsdon, and ordered him to ride back past
+the carriage, then follow and put up at the same inn, to learn who the
+lady was, and whither going; and, this knowledge gained, to ride into
+town full speed and tell his master all about it. Sir Charles then
+resumed his complacency, and cantered into London that same evening.
+
+Arrived there, he set himself in earnest to cut out his friend with Mrs.
+Woffington. He had already caused his correspondence with that lady to
+grow warm and more tender, by degrees. Keeping a copy of his last, he
+always knew where he was. Cupid's barometer rose by rule; and so he
+arrived by just gradations at an artful climax, and made her in terms of
+chivalrous affection, an offer of a house, etc., three hundred a year,
+etc., not forgetting his heart, etc. He knew that the ladies of the
+stage have an ear for flattery and an eye to the main chance.
+
+The good Sir Charles felt sure that, however she might flirt with
+Vane or others, she would not forego a position for any disinterested
+_penchant._ Still, as he was a close player, he determined to throw
+a little cold water on that flame. His plan, like everything truly
+scientific, was simple.
+
+“I'll run her down to him, and ridicule him to her,” resolved this
+faithful friend and lover dear.
+
+He began with Vane. He found him just leaving his own house. After
+the usual compliments, some such dialogue as this took place between
+Telemachus and pseudo Mentor:
+
+“I trust you are not really in the power of this actress?”
+
+“You are the slave of a word,” replied Vane. “Would you confound black
+and white because both are colors? She is like that sisterhood in
+nothing but a name. Even on the stage they have nothing in common. They
+are puppets--all attitude and trick; she is all ease, grace and nature.”
+
+“Nature!” cried Pomander. _“Laissez-moi tranquille._ They have
+artifice--nature's libel. She has art--nature's counterfeit.”
+
+“Her voice is truth told by music,” cried the poetical lover; “theirs
+are jingling instruments of falsehood.”
+
+“They are all instruments,” said the satirist; “she is rather the best
+tuned and played.”
+
+“Her face speaks in every lineament; theirs are rouged and wrinkled
+masks.”
+
+“Her mask is the best made, mounted, and moved; that is all.”
+
+“She is a fountain of true feeling.”
+
+“No; a pipe that conveys it without spilling or holding a drop.”
+
+“She is an angel of talent, sir.”
+
+“She's a devil of deception.”
+
+“She is a divinity to worship.”
+
+“She's a woman to fight shy of. There is not a woman in London better
+known,” continued Sir Charles. “She is a fair actress on the boards, and
+a great actress off them; but I can tell you how to add a new charm to
+her.”
+
+“Heaven can only do that,” said Vane, hastily.
+
+“Yes, you can. Make her blush. Ask her for the list of your
+predecessors.”
+
+Vane winced visibly. He quickened his step, as if to get rid of this
+gadfly.
+
+“I spoke to Mr. Quin,” said he, at last; “and he, who has no prejudice,
+paid her character the highest compliment.”
+
+“You have paid it the highest it admits,” was the reply. “You have let
+it deceive you.” Sir Charles continued in a more solemn tone: “Pray be
+warned. Why is it every man of intellect loves an actress once in his
+life, and no man of sense ever did it twice?”
+
+This last hit, coming after the carte and tierce we have described,
+brought an expression of pain to Mr. Vane's face. He said abruptly:
+“Excuse me, I desire to be alone for half an hour.”
+
+Machiavel bowed; and, instead of taking offense, said, in a tone full of
+feeling: “Ah! I give you pain! But you are right; think it calmly over a
+while, and you will see I advise you well.”
+
+He then made for the theater, and the weakish personage he had been
+playing upon walked down to the river, almost ran, in fact. He wanted to
+be out of sight.
+
+He got behind some houses, and then his face seemed literally to break
+loose from confinement; so anxious, sad, fearful and bitter were the
+expressions that coursed each other over that handsome countenance.
+
+What is the meaning of these hot and cold fits? It is not Sir Charles
+who has the power to shake Mr. Vane so without some help from within.
+_There is something wrong about this man!_
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+MACHIAVEL entered the green-room, intending to wait for Mrs. Woffington,
+and carry out the second part of his plan.
+
+He knew that weak minds cannot make head against ridicule, and with this
+pickax he proposed to clear the way, before he came to grave, sensible,
+business love with the lady. Machiavel was a man of talent. If he has
+been a silent personage hitherto, it is merely because it was not his
+cue to talk, but listen; otherwise, he was rather a master of the art
+of speech. He could be insinuating, eloquent, sensible, or satirical, at
+will. This personage sat in the green-room. In one hand was his diamond
+snuffbox, in the other a richly laced handkerchief; his clouded cane
+reposed by his side.
+
+There was an air of success about this personage. The gentle reader,
+however conceited a dog, could not see how he was to defeat Sir Charles,
+who was tall, stout, handsome, rich, witty, self-sufficient, cool,
+majestic, courageous, and in whom were united the advantages of a hard
+head, a tough stomach, and no heart at all.
+
+This great creature sat expecting Mrs. Woffington, like Olympian Jove
+awaiting Juno. But he was mortal, after all; for suddenly the serenity
+of that adamantine countenance was disturbed; his eye dilated; his grace
+and dignity were shaken. He huddled his handkerchief into one pocket,
+his snuff-box into another, and forgot his cane. He ran to the door in
+unaffected terror.
+
+Where are all his fine airs before a real danger? Love, intrigue,
+diplomacy, were all driven from his mind; for he beheld that
+approaching, which is the greatest peril and disaster known to social
+man. He saw a bore coming into the room!
+
+In a wild thirst for novelty, Pomander had once penetrated to Goodman's
+Fields Theater; there he had unguardedly put a question to a carpenter
+behind the scene; a seedy-black poet instantly pushed the carpenter away
+(down a trap, it is thought), and answered it in seven pages, and in
+continuation was so vaguely communicative, that he drove Sir Charles
+back into the far west.
+
+Sir Charles knew him again in a moment, and at sight of him bolted. They
+met at the door. “Ah! Mr. Triplet!” said the fugitive, “enchanted--to
+wish you good-morning!” and he plunged into the hiding-places of the
+theater.
+
+“That is a very polite gentleman!” thought Triplet. He was followed
+by the call-boy, to whom he was explaining that his avocations, though
+numerous, would not prevent his paying Mr. Rich the compliment of
+waiting all day in his green-room, sooner than go without an answer
+to three important propositions, in which the town and the arts were
+concerned.
+
+“What is your name?” said the boy of business to the man of words.
+
+“Mr. Triplet,” said Triplet.
+
+“Triplet? There is something for you in the hall,” said the urchin, and
+went off to fetch it.
+
+“I knew it,” said Triplet to himself; “they are accepted. There's a note
+in the hall to fix the reading.” He then derided his own absurdity in
+having ever for a moment desponded. “Master of three arts, by each of
+which men grow fat, how was it possible he should starve all his days!”
+
+He enjoyed a natural vanity for a few moments, and then came more
+generous feelings. What sparkling eyes there would be in Lambeth to-day!
+The butcher, at sight of Mr. Rich's handwriting, would give him credit.
+Jane should have a new gown.
+
+But when his tragedies were played, and he paid! El Dorado! His children
+should be the neatest in the street. Lysimachus and Roxalana should
+learn the English language, cost what it might; sausages should be
+diurnal; and he himself would not be puffed up, fat, lazy. No! he would
+work all the harder, be affable as ever, and, above all, never swamp
+the father, husband, and honest man in the poet and the blackguard of
+sentiment.
+
+Next his reflections took a business turn.
+
+“These tragedies--the scenery? Oh, I shall have to paint it myself. The
+heroes? Well, they have nobody who will play them as I should. (This was
+true!) It will be hard work, all this; but then I shall be paid for
+it. It cannot go on this way; I must and will be paid separately for my
+branches.”
+
+Just as he came to this resolution, the boy returned with a brown-paper
+parcel, addressed to Mr. James Triplet. Triplet weighed it in his hand;
+it was heavy. “How is this?” cried he. “Oh, I see,” said he, “these
+are the tragedies. He sends them to me for some trifling alterations;
+managers always do.” Triplet then determined to adopt these alterations,
+if judicious; for, argued he, sensibly enough: “Managers are practical
+men; and we, in the heat of composition, sometimes _(sic?)_ say more
+than is necessary, and become tedious.”
+
+With that he opened the parcel, and looked for Mr. Rich's communication;
+it was not in sight. He had to look between the leaves of the
+manuscripts for it; it was not there. He shook them; it did not fall
+out. He shook them as a dog shakes a rabbit; nothing!
+
+The tragedies were returned without a word. It took him some time to
+realize the full weight of the blow; but at last he saw that the manager
+of the Theater Royal, Covent Garden, declined to take a tragedy by
+Triplet into consideration or bare examination.
+
+He turned dizzy for a moment. Something between a sigh and a cry escaped
+him, and he sank upon a covered bench that ran along the wall. His poor
+tragedies fell here and there upon the ground, and his head went down
+upon his hands, which rested on Mrs. Woffington's picture. His anguish
+was so sharp, it choked his breath; when he recovered it, his eye bent
+down upon the picture. “Ah, Jane,” he groaned, “you know this villainous
+world better than I!” He placed the picture gently on the seat (that
+picture must now be turned into bread), and slowly stooped for his
+tragedies; they had fallen hither and thither; he had to crawl about for
+them; he was an emblem of all the humiliations letters endure.
+
+As he went after them on all-fours, more than one tear pattered on
+the dusty floor. Poor fellow! he was Triplet, and could not have died
+without tingeing the death-rattle with some absurdity; but, after all,
+he was a father driven to despair; a castle-builder, with his work
+rudely scattered; an artist, brutally crushed and insulted by a greater
+dunce than himself.
+
+Faint, sick, and dark, he sat a moment on the seat before he could find
+strength to go home and destroy all the hopes he had raised.
+
+While Triplet sat collapsed on the bench, fate sent into the room all
+in one moment, as if to insult his sorrow, a creature that seemed the
+goddess of gayety, impervious to a care. She swept in with a bold, free
+step, for she was rehearsing a man's part, and thundered without rant,
+but with a spirit and fire, and pace, beyond the conception of our poor
+tame actresses of 1852, these lines:
+
+“Now, by the joys Which my soul still has uncontrolled pursued, I would
+not turn aside from my least pleasure, Though all thy force were armed
+to bar my way; But, like the birds, great Nature's happy commoners,
+Rifle the sweets--”
+
+“I beg--your par--don, sir!” holding the book on a level with her eye,
+she had nearly run over “two poets instead of one.”
+
+“Nay, madam,” said Triplet, admiring, though sad, wretched, but polite,
+“pray continue. Happy the hearer, and still happier the author of verses
+so spoken. Ah!”
+
+“Yes,” replied the lady, “if you could persuade authors what we do
+for them, when we coax good music to grow on barren words. Are you an
+author, sir?” added she, slyly.
+
+“In a small way, madam. I have here three trifles--tragedies.”
+
+Mrs. Woffington looked askant at them, like a shy mare.
+
+“Ah, madam!” said Triplet, in one of his insane fits, “if I might but
+submit them to such a judgment as yours?”
+
+He laid his hand on them. It was as when a strange dog sees us go to
+take up a stone.
+
+The actress recoiled.
+
+“I am no judge of such things,” cried she, hastily.
+
+Triplet bit his lip. He could have killed her. It was provoking, people
+would rather be hanged than read a manuscript. Yet what hopeless
+trash they will read in crowds, which was manuscript a day ago. _Les
+imbeciles!_
+
+“No more is the manager of this theater a judge of such things,” cried
+the outraged quill-driver, bitterly.
+
+“What! has he accepted them?” said needle-tongue.
+
+“No, madam, he has had them six months, and see, madam, he has returned
+them me without a word.”
+
+Triplet's lip trembled.
+
+“Patience, my good sir,” was the merry reply. “Tragic authors should
+possess that, for they teach it to their audiences. Managers, sir, are
+like Eastern monarchs, inaccessible but to slaves and sultanas. Do you
+know I called upon Mr. Rich fifteen times before I could see him?”
+
+“You, madam? Impossible!”
+
+“Oh, it was years ago, and he has paid a hundred pounds for each of
+those little visits. Well, now, let me see, fifteen times; you must
+write twelve more tragedies, and then he will read _one;_ and when he
+has read it, he will favor you with his judgment upon it; and when you
+have got that, you will have what all the world knows is not worth a
+farthing. He! he! he!
+
+ 'And like the birds, gay Nature's happy commoners,
+ Rifle the sweets'--mum--mum--mum.”
+
+Her high spirits made Triplet sadder. To think that one word from this
+laughing lady would secure his work a hearing, and that he dared not ask
+her. She was up in the world, he was down. She was great, he was nobody.
+He felt a sort of chill at this woman--all brains and no heart. He took
+his picture and his plays under his arms and crept sorrowfully away.
+
+The actress's eye fell on him as he went off like a fifth act. His Don
+Quixote face struck her. She had seen it before.
+
+“Sir,” said she.
+
+“Madam,” said Triplet, at the door.
+
+“We have met before. There, don't speak, I'll tell you who you are.
+Yours is a face that has been good to me, and I never forget them.”
+
+“Me, madam!” said Triplet, taken aback. “I trust I know what is due to
+you better than to be good to you, madam,” said he, in his confused way.
+
+“To be sure!” cried she, “it is Mr. Triplet, good Mr. Triplet!” And this
+vivacious dame, putting her book down, seized both Triplet's hands and
+shook them.
+
+He shook hers warmly in return out of excess of timidity, and dropped
+tragedies, and kicked at them convulsively when they were down, for fear
+they should be in her way, and his mouth opened, and his eyes glared.
+
+“Mr. Triplet,” said the lady, “do you remember an Irish orange-girl you
+used to give sixpence to at Goodman's Fields, and pat her on the head
+and give her good advice, like a good old soul as you were? She took the
+sixpence.”
+
+“Madam,” said Trip, recovering a grain of pomp, “singular as it may
+appear, I remember the young person; she was very engaging. I trust
+no harm hath befallen her, for methought I discovered, in spite of her
+brogue, a beautiful nature in her.”
+
+“Go along wid yer blarney,” answered a rich brogue; “an' is it the
+comanther ye'd be putting on poor little Peggy?”
+
+“Oh! oh gracious!” gasped Triplet.
+
+“Yes,” was the reply; but into that “yes” she threw a whole sentence of
+meaning. “Fine cha-ney oranges!” chanted she, to put the matter beyond
+dispute.
+
+“Am I really so honored as to have patted you on that queen-like head!”
+ and he glared at it.
+
+“On the same head which now I wear,” replied she, pompously. “I kept
+it for the convaynience hintirely, only there's more in it. Well, Mr.
+Triplet, you see what time has done for me; now tell me whether he has
+been as kind to you. Are you going to speak to me, Mr. Triplet?”
+
+As a decayed hunter stands lean and disconsolate, head poked forward
+like a goose's, but if hounds sweep by his paddock in full cry, followed
+by horses who are what he was not, he does, by reason of the good blood
+that is and will be in his heart, _dum spiritus hoss regit artus,_ cock
+his ears, erect his tail, and trot fiery to his extremest hedge, and
+look over it, nostril distended, mane flowing, and neigh the hunt
+onward like a trumpet; so Triplet, who had manhood at bottom, instead of
+whining out his troubles in the ear of encouraging beauty, as a sneaking
+spirit would, perked up, and resolved to put the best face upon it all
+before so charming a creature of the other sex.
+
+“Yes, madam,” cried he, with the air of one who could have smacked
+his lips, “Providence has blessed me with an excellent wife and four
+charming children. My wife was Miss Chatterton; you remember her?”
+
+“Yes! Where is she playing now?”
+
+“Why, madam, her health is too weak for it.”
+
+“Oh!--You were scene-painter. Do you still paint scenes?”
+
+“With the pen, madam, not the brush. As the wags said, I transferred
+the distemper from my canvas to my imagination.” And Triplet laughed
+uproariously.
+
+When he had done, Mrs. Woffington, who had joined the laugh, inquired
+quietly whether his pieces had met with success.
+
+“Eminent--in the closet; the stage is to come!” and he smiled absurdly
+again.
+
+The lady smiled back.
+
+“In short,” said Triplet, recapitulating, “being blessed with health,
+and more tastes in the arts than most, and a cheerful spirit, I should
+be wrong, madam, to repine; and this day, in particular, is a happy
+one,” added the rose colorist, “since the great Mrs. Woffington has
+deigned to remember me, and call me friend.”
+
+Such was Triplet's summary.
+
+Mrs. Woffington drew out her memorandum-book, and took down her summary
+of the crafty Triplet's facts. So easy is it for us Triplets to draw the
+wool over the eyes of women and Woffingtons.
+
+“Triplet, discharged from scene-painting; wife, no engagement; four
+children supported by his pen--that is to say, starving; lose no time!”
+
+She closed her book; and smiled, and said:
+
+“I wish these things were comedies instead of trash-edies, as the French
+call them; we would cut one in half, and slice away the finest passages,
+and then I would act in it; and you would see how the stage-door would
+fly open at sight of the author.”
+
+“O Heaven!” said poor Trip, excited by this picture. “I'll go home, and
+write a comedy this moment.”
+
+“Stay!” said she; “you had better leave the tragedies with me.”
+
+“My dear madam! You will read them?”
+
+“Ahem! I will make poor Rich read them.”
+
+“But, madam, he has rejected them.”
+
+“That is the first step. Reading them comes after, when it comes at all.
+What have you got in that green baize?”
+
+“In this green baize?”
+
+“Well, in this green baize, then.”
+
+“Oh madam! nothing--nothing! To tell the truth, it is an adventurous
+attempt from memory. I saw you play Silvia, madam; I was so charmed,
+that I came every night. I took your face home with me--forgive my
+presumption, madam--and I produced this faint adumbration, which I
+expose with diffidence.”
+
+So then he took the green baize off.
+
+The color rushed into her face; she was evidently gratified. Poor, silly
+Mrs. Triplet was doomed to be right about this portrait.
+
+“I will give you a sitting,” said she. “You will find painting dull
+faces a better trade than writing dull tragedies. Work for other
+people's vanity, not your own; that is the art of art. And now I want
+Mr. Triplet's address.”
+
+“On the fly-leaf of each work, madam,” replied that florid author, “and
+also at the foot of every page which contains a particularly brilliant
+passage, I have been careful to insert the address of James Triplet,
+painter, actor, and dramatist, and Mrs. Woffington's humble, devoted
+servant.” He bowed ridiculously low, and moved toward the door; but
+something gushed across his heart, and he returned with long strides to
+her. “Madam!” cried he, with a jaunty manner, “you have inspired a son
+of Thespis with dreams of eloquence, you have tuned in a higher key a
+poet's lyre, you have tinged a painter's existence with brighter colors,
+and--and--” His mouth worked still, but no more artificial words would
+come. He sobbed out, “and God in heaven bless you, Mrs. Woffington!” and
+ran out of the room.
+
+Mrs. Woffington looked after him with interest, for this confirmed her
+suspicions; but suddenly her expression changed, she wore a look we have
+not yet seen upon her--it was a half-cunning, half-spiteful look; it was
+suppressed in a moment, she gave herself to her book, and presently Sir
+Charles Pomander sauntered into the room.
+
+“Ah! what, Mrs. Woffington here?” said the diplomat.
+
+“Sir Charles Pomander, I declare!” said the actress.
+
+“I have just parted with an admirer of yours.
+
+“I wish I could part with them all,” was the reply.
+
+“A pastoral youth, who means to win La Woffington by agricultural
+courtship--as shepherds woo in sylvan shades.”
+
+“With oaten pipe the rustic maids,” quoth the Woffington, improvising.
+
+The diplomat laughed, the actress laughed, and said, laughingly: _“Tell
+me what he says word for word?”_
+
+“It will only make you laugh.”
+
+“Well, and am I never to laugh, who provide so many laughs for you all?”
+
+_“C'est juste._ You shall share the general merriment. Imagine a
+romantic soul, who adores you for _your simplicity!”_
+
+“My simplicity! Am I so very simple?”
+
+“No,” said Sir Charles, monstrous dryly. “He says you are out of place
+on the stage, and wants to take the star from its firmament, and put it
+in a cottage.”
+
+“I am not a star,” replied the Woffington, “I am only a meteor. And what
+does the man think I am to do without this (here she imitated applause)
+from my dear public's thousand hands?”
+
+“You are to have this” (he mimicked a kiss) “from a single mouth,
+instead.”
+
+“He is mad! Tell me what more he says. Oh, don't stop to invent; I
+should detect you; and you would only spoil this man.”
+
+He laughed conceitedly. “I should spoil him! Well, then, he proposes to
+be your friend rather than your lover, and keep you from being talked
+of, he! he! instead of adding to your _eclat.”_
+
+“And if he is your friend, why don't you tell him my real character, and
+send him into the country?”
+
+She said this rapidly and with an appearance of earnest. The diplomatist
+fell into the trap.
+
+“I do,” said he; “but he snaps his fingers at me and common sense and
+the world. I really think there is only one way to get rid of him, and
+with him of every annoyance.”
+
+“Ah! that would be nice.”
+
+“Delicious! I had the honor, madam, of laying certain proposals at your
+feet.”
+
+“Oh! yes--your letter, Sir Charles. I have only just had time to run my
+eye down it. Let us examine it together.”
+
+She took out the letter with a wonderful appearance of interest, and the
+diplomat allowed himself to fall into the absurd position to which she
+invited him. They put their two heads together over the letter.
+
+“'A coach, a country-house, pin-money'--and I'm so tired of houses and
+coaches and pins. Oh! yes, here's something; what is this you offer me,
+up in this corner?”
+
+Sir Charles inspected the place carefully, and announced that it was
+“his heart.”
+
+“And he can't even write it!” said she. “That word is 'earth.' Ah! well,
+you know best. There is your letter, Sir Charles.”
+
+She courtesied, returned him the letter, and resumed her study of
+Lothario.
+
+“Favor me with your answer, madam,” said her suitor.
+
+“You have it,” was the reply.
+
+“Madam, I don't understand your answer,” said Sir Charles, stiffly.
+
+“I can't find you answers and understandings, too,” was the lady-like
+reply. “You must beat my answer into your understanding while I beat
+this man's verse into mine.
+
+ 'And like the birds, etc.'”
+
+Pomander recovered himself a little; he laughed with quiet insolence.
+“Tell me,” said he, “do you really refuse?”
+
+“My good soul,” said Mrs. Woffington, “why this surprise! Are you so
+ignorant of the stage and the world as not to know that I refuse such
+offers as yours every week of my life?”
+
+“I know better,” was the cool reply. She left it unnoticed.
+
+“I have so many of these,” continued she, “that I have begun to forget
+they are insults.”
+
+At this word the button broke off Sir Charles's foil.
+
+“Insults, madam! They are the highest compliments you have left it in
+our power to pay you.”
+
+The other took the button off her foil.
+
+“Indeed!” cried she, with well-feigned surprise. “Oh! I understand.
+To be your mistress could be but a temporary disgrace; to be your wife
+would be a lasting discredit,” she continued. “And now, sir, having
+played your rival's game, and showed me your whole hand” (a light broke
+in upon our diplomat), “do something to recover the reputation of a man
+of the world. A gentleman is somewhere about in whom you have interested
+me by your lame satire; pray tell him I am in the green-room, with no
+better companion than this bad poet.”
+
+Sir Charles clinched his teeth.
+
+“I accept the delicate commission,” replied he, “that you may see how
+easily the man of the world drops what the rustic is eager to pick up.”
+
+“That is better,” said the actress, with a provoking appearance of
+good-humor. “You have a woman's tongue, if not her wit; but, my good
+soul,” added she, with cool _hauteur,_ “remember you have something to
+do of more importance than anything you can say.”
+
+“I accept your courteous dismissal, madam,” said Pomander, grinding his
+teeth. “I will send a carpenter for your swain. And I leave you.”
+
+He bowed to the ground.
+
+“Thanks for the double favor, good Sir Charles.”
+
+She courtesied to the floor.
+
+Feminine vengeance! He had come between her and her love. All very
+clever, Mrs. Actress; but was it wise?
+
+“I am revenged,” thought Mrs. Woffington, with a little feminine smirk.
+
+“I will be revenged,” vowed Pomander, clinching his teeth.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+COMPARE a November day with a May day. They are not more unlike than a
+beautiful woman in company with a man she is indifferent to or averse,
+and the same woman with the man of her heart by her side.
+
+At sight of Mr. Vane, all her coldness and _nonchalance_ gave way to a
+gentle complacency; and when she spoke to him, her voice, so clear and
+cutting in the late _assaut d'armes,_ sank of its own accord into the
+most tender, delicious tone imaginable.
+
+Mr. Vane and she made love. He pleased her, and she desired to please
+him. My reader knows her wit, her _finesse,_ her fluency; but he cannot
+conceive how god-like was her way of making love. I can put a few of the
+corpses of her words upon paper, but where are the heavenly tones--now
+calm and convincing, now soft and melancholy, now thrilling with
+tenderness, now glowing with the fiery eloquence of passion? She told
+him that she knew the map of his face; that for some days past he had
+been subject to an influence adverse to her. She begged him, calmly, for
+his own sake, to distrust false friends, and judge her by his own heart,
+eyes, and judgment. He promised her he would.
+
+“And I do trust you, in spite of them all,” said he; “for your face is
+the shrine of sincerity and candor. I alone know you.”
+
+Then she prayed him to observe the heartlessness of his sex, and to say
+whether she had done ill to hide the riches of her heart from the cold
+and shallow, and to keep them all for one honest man, “who will be my
+friend, I hope,” said she, “as well as my lover.”
+
+“Ah!” said Vane, “that is my ambition.”
+
+“We actresses,” said she, “make good the old proverb, 'Many lovers, but
+few friends.' And oh, 'tis we who need a friend. Will you be mine?”
+
+While he lived, he would.
+
+In turn, he begged her to be generous, and tell him the way for him,
+Ernest Vane, inferior in wit and address to many of her admirers, to win
+her heart from them all.
+
+This singular woman's answer is, I think, worth attention.
+
+“Never act in my presence; never try to be eloquent, or clever; never
+force a sentiment, or turn a phrase. Remember, I am the goddess of
+tricks. Do not descend to competition with me and the Pomanders of the
+world. At all littlenesses, you will ever be awkward in my eyes. And I
+am a woman. I must have a superior to love--lie open to my eye. Light
+itself is not more beautiful than the upright man, whose bosom is open
+to the day. Oh yes! fear not you will be my superior, dear; for in me
+honesty has to struggle against the habits of my art and life. Be simple
+and sincere, and I shall love you, and bless the hour you shone upon my
+cold, artificial life. Ah, Ernest!” said she, fixing on his eye her own,
+the fire of which melted into tenderness as she spoke, “be my friend.
+Come between me and the temptations of an unprotected life--the
+recklessness of a vacant heart.”
+
+He threw himself at her feet. He called her an angel. He told her he
+was unworthy of her, but that he would try and deserve her. Then he
+hesitated, and trembling he said:
+
+“I will be frank and loyal. Had I not better tell you everything? You
+will not hate me for a confession I make myself?”
+
+“I shall like you better--oh! so much better!”
+
+“Then I will own to you--”
+
+“Oh, do not tell me you have ever loved before me! I could not bear to
+hear it!” cried this inconsistent personage.
+
+The other weak creature needed no more.
+
+“I see plainly I never loved but you,” said he.
+
+“Let me hear that only!” cried she; “I am jealous even of the past. Say
+you never loved but me. Never mind whether it is true. My child, you do
+not even yet know love. Ernest, shall I make you love--as none of your
+sex ever loved--with heart, and brain, and breath, and life, and soul?”
+
+With these rapturous words, she poured the soul of love into his eyes;
+he forgot everything in the world but her; he dissolved in present
+happiness and vowed himself hers forever. And she, for her part, bade
+him but retain her esteem and no woman ever went further in love than
+she would. She was a true epicure. She had learned that passion, vulgar
+in itself, is god-like when based upon esteem.
+
+This tender scene was interrupted by the call-boy, who brought Mrs.
+Woffington a note from the manager, informing her there would be
+no rehearsal. This left her at liberty, and she proceeded to take a
+somewhat abrupt leave of Mr. Vane. He was endeavoring to persuade her
+to let him be her companion until dinner-time (she was to be his quest),
+when Pomander entered the room.
+
+Mrs. Woffington, however, was not to be persuaded, she excused herself
+on the score of a duty which she said she had to perform, and whispering
+as she passed Pomander, “Keep your own counsel,” she went out rather
+precipitately.
+
+Vane looked slightly disappointed.
+
+Sir Charles, who had returned to see whether (as he fully expected) she
+had told Vane everything--and who, at that moment, perhaps, would
+not have been sorry had Mrs. Woffington's lover called him to serious
+account--finding it was not her intention to make mischief, and not
+choosing to publish his own defeat, dropped quietly into his old line,
+and determined to keep the lovers in sight, and play for revenge.
+He smiled and said: “My good sir, nobody can hope to monopolize Mrs.
+Woffington. She has others to do justice to besides you.”
+
+To his surprise, Mr. Vane turned instantly round upon him, and, looking
+him haughtily in the face, said: “Sir Charles Pomander, the settled
+malignity with which you pursue that lady is unmanly and offensive to
+me, who love her. Let our acquaintance cease here, if you please, or let
+her be sacred from your venomous tongue.”
+
+Sir Charles bowed stiffly, and replied, that it was only due to himself
+to withdraw a protection so little appreciated.
+
+The two friends were in the very act of separating forever, when who
+should run in but Pompey, the renegade. He darted up to Sir Charles, and
+said: “Massa Pomannah she in a coach, going to 10, Hercules Buildings.
+I'm in a hurry, Massa Pomannah.”
+
+“Where?” cried Pomander. “Say that again.”
+
+“10, Hercules Buildings, Lambeth. Me in a hurry, Massa Pomannah.”
+
+“Faithful child, there's a guinea for thee. Fly!”
+
+The slave flew, and, taking a short cut, caught and fastened on to the
+slow vehicle in the Strand.
+
+“It is a house of rendezvous,” said Sir Charles, half to himself, half
+to Mr. Vane. He repeated in triumph: “It is a house of rendezvous.” He
+then, recovering his _sang-froid,_ and treating it all as a matter of
+course, explained that at 10, Hercules Buildings, was a fashionable
+shop, with entrances from two streets; that the best Indian scarfs and
+shawls were sold there, and that ladies kept their carriages waiting an
+immense time in the principal street, while they were supposed to be in
+the shop, or the show-room. He then went on to say that he had only this
+morning heard that the intimacy between Mrs. Woffington and a Colonel
+Murthwaite, although publicly broken off for prudential reasons, was
+still clandestinely carried on. She had, doubtless, slipped away to meet
+the colonel.
+
+Mr. Vane turned pale.
+
+“No! I will not suspect. I will not dog her like a bloodhound,” cried
+he.
+
+“I will!” said Pomander.
+
+“You! By what right?”
+
+“The right of curiosity. I will know whether it is you who are imposed
+on, or whether you are right, and all the world is deceived in this
+woman.”
+
+He ran out; but, for all his speed, when he got into the street there
+was the jealous lover at his elbow. They darted with all speed into the
+Strand; got a coach. Sir Charles, on the box, gave Jehu a guinea, and
+took the reins--and by a Niagara of whipcord they attained Lambeth; and
+at length, to his delight, Pomander saw another coach before him with a
+gold-laced black slave behind it. The coach stopped; and the slave came
+to the door. The shop in question was a few hundred yards distant. The
+adroit Sir Charles not only stopped but turned his coach, and let the
+horses crawl back toward London; he also flogged the side panels to
+draw the attention of Mr. Vane. That gentleman looked through the little
+circular window at the back of the vehicle, and saw a lady paying the
+coachman. There was no mistaking her figure. This lady, then, followed
+at a distance by her slave, walked on toward Hercules Buildings; and it
+was his miserable fate to see her look uneasily round, and at last glide
+in at a side door, close to the silk-mercer's shop.
+
+The carriage stopped. Sir Charles came himself to the door.
+
+“Now, Vane,” said he, “before I consent to go any further in this
+business, you must promise me to be cool and reasonable. I abhor
+absurdity; and there must be no swords drawn for this little hypocrite.”
+
+“I submit to no dictation,” said Vane, white as a sheet.
+
+“You have benefited so far by my knowledge,” said the other politely;
+“let me, who am self-possessed, claim some influence with you.”
+
+“Forgive me!” said poor Vane. “My ang--my sorrow that such an angel
+should be a monster of deceit.” He could say no more.
+
+They walked to the shop.
+
+“How she peeped, this way and that,” said Pomander, “sly little Woffy!
+
+“No! on second thoughts,” said he, “it is the other street we must
+reconnoiter; and, if we don't see her there, we will enter the shop,
+and by dint of this purse we shall soon untie the knot of the Woffington
+riddle.”
+
+Vane leaned heavily on his tormentor.
+
+“I am faint,” said he.
+
+“Lean on me, my dear friend,” said Sir Charles. “Your weakness will
+leave you in the next street.”
+
+In the next street they discovered--nothing. In the shop, they found--no
+Mrs. Woffington. They returned to the principal street. Vane began to
+hope there was no positive evidence. Suddenly three stories up a fiddle
+was heard. Pomander took no notice, but Vane turned red; this put Sir
+Charles upon the scent.
+
+“Stay!” said he. “Is not that an Irish tune?”
+
+Vane groaned. He covered his face with his hands, and hissed out:
+
+“It is her favorite tune.”
+
+“Aha!” said Pomander. “Follow me!”
+
+They crept up the stairs, Pomander in advance; they heard the signs of
+an Irish orgie--a rattling jig played and danced with the inspiriting
+interjections of that frolicsome nation. These sounds ceased after a
+while, and Pomander laid his hand on his friend's shoulder.
+
+“I prepare you,” said he, “for what you are sure to see. This woman
+was an Irish bricklayer's daughter, and 'what is bred in the bone never
+comes out of the flesh;' you will find her sitting on some Irishman's
+knee, whose limbs are ever so much stouter than yours. You are the man
+of her head, and this is the man of her heart. These things would be
+monstrous, if they were not common; incredible, if we did not see them
+every day. But this poor fellow, whom probably she deceives as well as
+you, is not to be sacrificed like a dog to your unjust wrath; he is as
+superior to her as you are to him.”
+
+“I will commit no violence,” said Vane. “I still hope she is innocent.”
+
+Pomander smiled, and said he hoped so too.
+
+“And if she is what you think, I will but show her she is known, and,
+blaming myself as much as her--oh yes! more than her!--I will go down
+this night to Shropshire, and never speak word to her again in this
+world or the next.”
+
+“Good,” said Sir Charles.
+
+ “'Le bruit est pour le fat, la plainte est pour le sot,
+ L'honndete homine trompe s'eloigne et ne dit mot.'
+
+Are you ready?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Then follow me.”
+
+Turning the handle gently, he opened the door like lightning, and was in
+the room. Vane's head peered over his shoulder. She was actually there!
+
+For once in her life, the cautious, artful woman was taken by surprise.
+She gave a little scream, and turned as red as fire. But Sir Charles
+surprised somebody else even more than he did poor Mrs. Woffington.
+
+It would be impertinent to tantalize my reader, but I flatter myself
+this history is not written with power enough to do that, and I may
+venture to leave him to guess whom Sir Charles Pomander surprised more
+than he did the actress, while I go back for the lagging sheep.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+JAMES TRIPLET, water in his eye, but fire in his heart, went home on
+wings. Arrived there, he anticipated curiosity by informing all hands he
+should answer no questions. Only in the intervals of a work, which was
+to take the family out of all its troubles, he should gradually unfold
+a tale, verging on the marvelous--a tale whose only fault was, that
+fiction, by which alone the family could hope to be great, paled beside
+it. He then seized some sheets of paper fished out some old dramatic
+sketches, and a list of _dramatis personae,_ prepared years ago, and
+plunged into a comedy. As he wrote, true to his promise, he painted,
+Triplet-wise, that story which we have coldly related, and made it
+appear, to all but Mrs. Triplet, that he was under the tutela, or
+express protection of Mrs. Woffington, who would push his fortunes until
+the only difficulty would be to keep arrogance out of the family heart.
+
+Mrs. Triplet groaned aloud. “You have brought the picture home, I see,”
+ said she.
+
+“Of course I have. She is going to give me a sitting.”
+
+“At what hour, of what day?” said Mrs. Triplet, with a world of meaning.
+
+“She did not say,” replied Triplet, avoiding his wife's eye.
+
+“I know she did not,” was the answer. “I would rather you had brought me
+the ten shillings than this fine story,” said she.
+
+“Wife!” said Triplet, “don't put me into a frame of mind in which
+successful comedies are not written.” He scribbled away; but his wife's
+despondency told upon the man of disappointments. Then he stuck fast;
+then he became fidgety.
+
+“Do keep those children quiet!” said the father.
+
+“Hush, my dears,” said the mother; “let your father write. Comedy seems
+to give you more trouble than tragedy, James,” added she, soothingly.
+
+“Yes,” was his answer. “Sorrow comes somehow more natural to me; but for
+all that I have got a bright thought, Mrs. Triplet. Listen, all of you.
+You see, Jane, they are all at a sumptuous banquet, all the _dramatis
+personae,_ except the poet.”
+
+Triplet went on writing, and reading his work out: “Music, sparkling
+wine, massive plate, rose-water in the hand-glasses, soup, fish--shall
+I have three sorts of fish? I will; they are cheap in this market. Ah!
+Fortune, you wretch, here at least I am your master, and I'll make you
+know it--venison,” wrote Triplet, with a malicious grin, “game, pickles
+and provocatives in the center of the table; then up jumps one of the
+guests, and says he--”
+
+“Oh dear, I am so hungry.”
+
+This was not from the comedy, but from one of the boys.
+
+“And so am I,” cried a girl.
+
+“That is an absurd remark, Lysimachus,” said Triplet with a suspicious
+calmness. “How can a boy be hungry three hours after breakfast?”
+
+“But, father, there was no breakfast for breakfast.”
+
+“Now I ask you, Mrs. Triplet,” appealed the author, “how I am to write
+comic scenes if you let Lysimachus and Roxalana here put the heavy
+business in every five minutes?”
+
+“Forgive them; the poor things are hungry.”
+
+“Then let them be hungry in another room,” said the irritated scribe.
+“They shan't cling round my pen, and paralyze it, just when it is going
+to make all our fortunes; but you women,” snapped Triplet the Just,
+“have no consideration for people's feelings. Send them all to bed;
+every man Jack of them!”
+
+Finding the conversation taking this turn, the brats raised a unanimous
+howl.
+
+Triplet darted a fierce glance at them. “Hungry, hungry,” cried he;
+“is that a proper expression to use before a father who is sitting
+down here, all gayety” (scratching wildly with his pen) “and hilarity”
+ (scratch) “to write a com--com--” he choked a moment; then in a very
+different voice, all sadness and tenderness, he said: “Where's the
+youngest--where's Lucy? As if I didn't know you are hungry.”
+
+Lucy came to him directly. He took her on his knee, pressed her gently
+to his side, and wrote silently. The others were still.
+
+“Father,” said Lucy, aged five, the germ of a woman, “I am not very
+hungry.”
+
+“And I am not hungry at all,” said bluff Lysimachus, taking his sister's
+cue; then going upon his own tact he added, “I had a great piece of
+bread and butter yesterday!”
+
+“Wife, they will drive me mad!” and he dashed at the paper.
+
+The second boy explained to his mother, _sotto voce:_ “Mother, he _made_
+us hungry out of his book.”
+
+“It is a beautiful book,” said Lucy. “Is it a cookery book?”
+
+Triplet roared: “Do you hear that?” inquired he, all trace of ill-humor
+gone. “Wife,” he resumed, after a gallant scribble, “I took that sermon
+I wrote.”
+
+“And beautiful it was, James. I'm sure it quite cheered me up with
+thinking that we shall all be dead before so very long.”
+
+“Well, the reverend gentleman would not have it. He said it was too hard
+upon sin. 'You run at the Devil like a mad bull,' said he. 'Sell it in
+Lambeth, sir; here calmness and decency are before everything,' says he.
+'My congregation expect to go to heaven down hill. Perhaps the chaplain
+of Newgate might give you a crown for it,' said he,” and Triplet dashed
+viciously at the paper. “Ah!” sighed he, “if my friend Mrs. Woffington
+would but drop these stupid comedies and take to tragedy, this house
+would soon be all smiles.”
+
+“Oh James!” replied Mrs. Triplet, almost peevishly, “how can you expect
+anything but fine words from that woman? You won't believe what all the
+world says. You will trust to your own good heart.”
+
+“I haven't a good heart,” said the poor, honest fellow. “I spoke like a
+brute to you just now.”
+
+“Never mind, James,” said the woman. “I wonder how you put up with me
+at all--a sick, useless creature. I often wish to die, for your sake. I
+know you would do better. I am such a weight round your neck.”
+
+The man made no answer, but he put Lucy gently down, and went to the
+woman, and took her forehead to his bosom, and held it there; and after
+a while returned with silent energy to his comedy.
+
+“Play us a tune on the fiddle, father.”
+
+“Ay, do, husband. That helps you often in your writing.”
+
+Lysimachus brought him the fiddle, and Triplet essayed a merry tune; but
+it came out so doleful, that he shook his head, and laid the
+instrument down. Music must be in the heart, or it will come out of the
+fingers--notes, not music.
+
+“No,” said he; “let us be serious and finish this comedy slap off.
+Perhaps it hitches because I forgot to invoke the comic muse. She must
+be a black-hearted jade, if she doesn't come with merry notions to a
+poor devil, starving in the midst of his hungry little ones.”
+
+“We are past help from heathen goddesses,” said the woman. “We must pray
+to Heaven to look down upon us and our children.”
+
+The man looked up with a very bad expression on his countenance.
+
+“You forget,” said he sullenly, “our street is very narrow, and the
+opposite houses are very high.”
+
+“James!”
+
+“How can Heaven be expected to see what honest folk endure in so dark a
+hole as this?” cried the man, fiercely.
+
+“James,” said the woman, with fear and sorrow, “what words are these?”
+
+The man rose and flung his pen upon the floor.
+
+“Have we given honesty a fair trial--yes or no?”
+
+“No!” said the woman, without a moment's hesitation; “not till we die,
+as we have lived. Heaven is higher than the sky; children,” said she,
+lest perchance her husband's words should have harmed their young souls,
+“the sky is above the earth, and heaven is higher than the sky; and
+Heaven is just.”
+
+“I suppose it is so,” said the man, a little cowed by her. “Everybody
+says so. I think so, at bottom, myself; but I can't see it. I want to
+see it, but I can't!” cried he, fiercely. “Have my children offended
+Heaven? They will starve--they will die! If I was Heaven, I'd be just,
+and send an angel to take these children's part. They cried to me for
+bread--I had no bread; so I gave them hard words. The moment I had done
+that I knew it was all over. God knows it took a long while to break my
+heart; but it is broken at last; quite, quite broken! broken! broken!”
+
+And the poor thing laid his head upon the table, and sobbed, beyond all
+power of restraint. The children cried round him, scarce knowing why;
+and Mrs. Triplet could only say, “My poor husband!” and prayed and wept
+upon the couch where she lay.
+
+It was at this juncture that a lady, who had knocked gently and unheard,
+opened the door, and with a light step entered the apartment; but no
+sooner had she caught sight of Triplet's anguish, than, saying hastily,
+“Stay, I forgot something,” she made as hasty an exit.
+
+This gave Triplet a moment to recover himself; and Mrs. Woffington,
+whose lynx eye had comprehended all at a glance, and who had determined
+at once what line to take, came flying in again, saying:
+
+“Wasn't somebody inquiring for an angel? Here I am. See, Mr. Triplet;”
+ and she showed him a note, which said: “Madam, you are an angel. From a
+perfect stranger,” explained she; “so it must be true.”
+
+“Mrs. Woffington,” said Mr. Triplet to his wife. Mrs. Woffington planted
+herself in the middle of the floor, and with a comical glance, setting
+her arms akimbo, uttered a shrill whistle.
+
+“Now you will see another angel--there are two sorts of them.”
+
+Pompey came in with a basket; she took it from him.
+
+“Lucifer, avaunt!” cried she, in a terrible tone, that drove him to the
+wall; “and wait outside the door,” added she, conversationally.
+
+“I heard you were ill, ma'am, and I have brought you some physic--black
+draughts from Burgundy;” and she smiled. And, recovered from their
+first surprise, young and old began to thaw beneath that witching,
+irresistible smile. “Mrs. Triplet, I have come to give your husband a
+sitting; will you allow me to eat my little luncheon with you? I am so
+hungry.” Then she clapped her hands, and in ran Pompey. She sent him
+for a pie she professed to have fallen in love with at the corner of the
+street.
+
+“Mother,” said Alcibiades, “will the lady give me a bit of her pie?”
+
+“Hush! you rude boy!” cried the mother.
+
+“She is not much of a lady if she does not,” cried Mrs. Woffington.
+“Now, children, first let us look at--ahem--a comedy. Nineteen _dramatis
+personae!_ What do you say, children, shall we cut out seven, or
+nine? that is the question. You can't bring your armies into our
+drawing-rooms, Mr. Dagger-and-bowl. Are you the Marlborough of comedy?
+Can you marshal battalions on a turkey carpet, and make gentlefolks
+witty in platoons? What is this in the first act? A duel, and both
+wounded! You butcher!”
+
+“They are not to die, ma'am!” cried Triplet, deprecatingly “upon my
+honor,” said he, solemnly, spreading his bands on his bosom.
+
+“Do you think I'll trust their lives with you? No! Give me a pen; this
+is the way we run people through the body.” Then she wrote (“business.”
+ Araminta looks out of the garret window. Combatants drop their swords,
+put their hands to their hearts, and stagger off O. P. and P. S.) “Now,
+children, who helps me to lay the cloth?”
+
+“I!”
+
+“And I!” (The children run to the cupboard.)
+
+_Mrs. Triplet_ (half rising). “Madam, I--can't think of allowing you.”
+
+Mrs. Woffington replied: “Sit down, madam, or I must use brute force.
+If you are ill, be ill--till I make you well. Twelve plates, quick!
+Twenty-four knives, quicker! Forty-eight forks quickest!” She met the
+children with the cloth and laid it; then she met them again and laid
+knives and forks, all at full gallop, which mightily excited the bairns.
+Pompey came in with the pie, Mrs. Woffington took it and set it before
+Triplet.
+
+_Mrs. Woffington._ “Your coat, Mr. Triplet, if you please.”
+
+_Mr. Triplet._ “My coat, madam!”
+
+_Mrs. Woffington._ “Yes, off with it--there's a hole in it--and carve.”
+ Then she whipped to the other end of the table and stitched like
+wild-fire. “Be pleased to cast your eyes on that, Mrs. Triplet. Pass
+it to the lady, young gentleman. Fire away, Mr. Triplet, never mind us
+women. Woffington's housewife, ma'am, fearful to the eye, only it holds
+everything in the world, and there is a small space for everything
+else--to be returned by the bearer. Thank you, sir.” (Stitches away like
+lightning at the coat.) “Eat away, children! now is your time; when once
+I begin, the pie will soon end; I do everything so quick.”
+
+_Roxalana._ “The lady sews quicker than you, mother.”
+
+_Woffington._ “Bless the child, don't come so near my sword-arm; the
+needle will go into your eye, and out at the back of your head.”
+
+This nonsense made the children giggle.
+
+“The needle will be lost--the child no more--enter undertaker--house
+turned topsy-turvy--father shows Woffington to the door--off she
+goes with a face as long and dismal as some people's comedies--no
+names--crying fine chan-ey oranges.”
+
+The children, all but Lucy, screeched with laughter.
+
+Lucy said gravely:
+
+“Mother, the lady is very funny.”
+
+“You will be as funny when you are as well paid for it.”
+
+This just hit poor Trip's notion of humor, and he began to choke, with
+his mouth full of pie.
+
+“James, take care,” said Mrs. Triplet, sad and solemn.
+
+James looked up.
+
+“My wife is a good woman, madam,” said he; “but deficient in an
+important particular.”
+
+“Oh, James!”
+
+“Yes, my dear. I regret to say you have no sense of humor; nummore than
+a cat, Jane.”
+
+“What! because the poor thing can't laugh at your comedy?”
+
+“No, ma'am; but she laughs at nothing.”
+
+“Try her with one of your tragedies, my lad.”
+
+“I am sure, James,” said the poor, good, lackadaisical woman, “if I
+don't laugh, it is not for want of the will. I used to be a very hearty
+laugher,” whined she; “but I haven't laughed this two years.”
+
+“Oh, indeed!” said the Woffington. “Then the next two years you shall do
+nothing else.”
+
+“Ah, madam!” said Triplet. “That passes the art, even of the great
+comedian.”
+
+“Does it?” said the actress, coolly.
+
+_Lucy._ “She is not a comedy lady. You don't ever cry, pretty lady?”
+
+_Woffington_ (ironically). “Oh, of course not.”
+
+_Lucy_ (confidentially). “Comedy is crying. Father cried all the time he
+was writing his one.”
+
+Triplet turned red as fire.
+
+“Hold your tongue,” said he. “I was bursting with merriment. Wife,
+our children talk too much; they put their noses into everything, and
+criticise their own father.”
+
+“Unnatural offspring!” laughed the visitor.
+
+“And when they take up a notion, Socrates couldn't convince them to
+the contrary. For instance, madam, all this morning they thought fit to
+assume that they were starving.”
+
+“So we were,” said Lysimachus, “until the angel came; and the devil went
+for the pie.”
+
+“There--there--there! Now, you mark my words; we shall never get that
+idea out of their heads--”
+
+“Until,” said Mrs. Woffington, lumping a huge cut of pie into Roxalana's
+plate, “we put a very different idea into their stomachs.” This and the
+look she cast on Mrs. Triplet fairly caught that good, though somber
+personage. She giggled; put her hand to her face, and said: “I'm sure I
+ask your pardon, ma'am.”
+
+It was no use; the comedian had determined they should all laugh, and
+they were made to laugh. Then she rose, and showed them how to drink
+healths _a la Francaise;_ and keen were her little admirers to touch her
+glass with theirs. And the pure wine she had brought did Mrs. Triplet
+much good, too; though not so much as the music and sunshine of her face
+and voice. Then, when their stomachs were full of good food, and the
+soul of the grape tingled in their veins, and their souls glowed under
+her great magnetic power, she suddenly seized the fiddle, and showed
+them another of her enchantments. She put it on her knee, and played
+a tune that would have made gout, cholic and phthisic dance upon their
+last legs. She played to the eye as well as to the ear, with such a
+smart gesture of the bow, and such a radiance of face as she looked
+at them, that whether the music came out of her wooden shell, or her
+horse-hair wand, or her bright self, seemed doubtful. They pranced on
+their chairs; they could not keep still. She jumped up; so did they. She
+gave a wild Irish horroo. She put the fiddle in Triplet's hand.
+
+“The wind that shakes the barley, ye divil!” cried she.
+
+Triplet went _hors de lui;_ he played like Paganini, or an intoxicated
+demon. Woffington covered the buckle in gallant style; she danced, the
+children danced. Triplet fiddled and danced, and flung his limbs in wild
+dislocation: the wineglasses danced; and last, Mrs. Triplet was observed
+to be bobbing about on her sofa, in a monstrous absurd way, droning out
+the tune, and playing her hands with mild enjoyment, all to herself.
+Woffington pointed out this pantomimic soliloquy to the two boys, with
+a glance full of fiery meaning. This was enough. With a fiendish yell,
+they fell upon her, and tore her, shrieking, off the sofa. And lo! when
+she was once launched, she danced up to her husband, and set to him with
+a meek deliberation that was as funny as any part of the scene. So
+then the mover of all this slipped on one side, and let the stone of
+merriment--roll--and roll it did; there was no swimming, sprawling, or
+irrelevant frisking; their feet struck the ground for every note of the
+fiddle, pat as its echo, their faces shone, their hearts leaped, and
+their poor frozen natures came out, and warmed themselves at the glowing
+melody; a great sunbeam had come into their abode, and these human motes
+danced in it. The elder ones recovered their gravity first, they sat
+down breathless, and put their hands to their hearts; they looked at
+one another, and then at the goddess who had revived them. Their first
+feeling was wonder; were they the same, who, ten minutes ago, were
+weeping together? Yes! ten minutes ago they were rayless, joyless,
+hopeless. Now the sun was in their hearts, and sorrow and sighing were
+fled, as fogs disperse before the god of day. It was magical; could
+a mortal play upon the soul of man, woman and child like this? Happy
+Woffington! and suppose this was more than half acting, but such acting
+as Triplet never dreamed of; and to tell the honest, simple truth, I
+myself should not have suspected it; but children are sharper than one
+would think, and Alcibiades Triplet told, in after years, that, when
+they were all dancing except the lady, he caught sight of her face--and
+it was quite, quite grave, and even sad; but, as often as she saw him
+look at her, she smiled at him so gayly--he couldn't believe it was the
+same face.
+
+If it was art, glory be to such art so worthily applied! and honor to
+such creatures as this, that come like sunshine into poor men's houses,
+and tune drooping hearts to daylight and hope!
+
+The wonder of these worthy people soon changed to gratitude. Mrs.
+Woffington stopped their mouths at once.
+
+“No, no!” cried she; “if you really love me, no scenes; I hate them.
+Tell these brats to kiss me, and let me go. I must sit for my picture
+after dinner; it is a long way to Bloomsbury Square.”
+
+The children needed no bidding; they clustered round her, and poured out
+their innocent hearts as children only do.
+
+“I shall pray for you after father and mother,” said one.
+
+“I shall pray for you after daily bread,” said Lucy, “because we were
+_tho_ hungry till you came!”
+
+“My poor children!” cried Woffington, and hard to grown-up actors,
+as she called us, but sensitive to children, she fairly melted as she
+embraced them.
+
+It was at this precise juncture that the door was unceremoniously
+opened, and the two gentlemen burst upon the scene!
+
+My reader now guesses whom Sir Charles Pomander surprised more than he
+did Mrs. Woffington. He could not for the life of him comprehend what
+she was doing, and what was her ulterior object. The _nil admirari_ of
+the fine gentleman deserted him, and he gazed open-mouthed, like the
+veriest chaw-bacon.
+
+The actress, unable to extricate herself in a moment from the children,
+stood there like Charity, in New College Chapel, while the mother kissed
+her hand, and the father quietly dropped tears, like some leaden water
+god in the middle of a fountain.
+
+Vane turned hot and cold by turns, with joy and shame. Pomander's genius
+came to the aid of their embarrassment.
+
+“Follow my lead,” whispered he. “What! Mrs. Woffington here!” cried he;
+then he advanced business-like to Triplet. “We are aware, sir, of your
+various talents, and are come to make a demand on them. I, sir, am the
+unfortunate possessor of frescoes; time has impaired their indelicacy,
+no man can restore it as you can.”
+
+“Augh! sir! sir!” said the gratified goose.
+
+“My Cupid's bows are walking-sticks, and my Venus's noses are snubbed.
+You must set all that straight on your own terms, Mr. Triplet.”
+
+“In a single morning all shall bloom again, sir! Whom would you wish
+them to resemble in feature? I have lately been praised for my skill in
+portraiture.” (Glancing at Mrs. Woffington.)
+
+“Oh!” said Pomander, carelessly, “you need not go far for Venuses and
+Cupids, I suppose?”
+
+“I see, sir; my wife and children. Thank you, sir; thank you.”
+
+Pomander stared; Mrs. Woffington laughed.
+
+Now it was Vane's turn.
+
+“Let me have a copy of verses from your pen. I shall have five pounds at
+your disposal for them.”
+
+“The world has found me out!” thought Triplet, blinded by his vanity.--
+
+“The subject, sir?”
+
+“No matter,” said Vane--“no matter.”
+
+“Oh, of course it does not matter to me,” said Triplet, with some
+_hauteur,_ and assuming poetic omnipotence. “Only, when one knows the
+subject, one can sometimes make the verses apply better.”
+
+“Write then, since you are so confident, upon Mrs. Woffington.”
+
+“Ah! that is a subject! They shall be ready in an hour!” cried Trip,
+in whose imagination Parnassus was a raised counter. He had in a teacup
+some lines on Venus and Mars which he could not but feel would fit
+Thalia and Croesus, or Genius and Envy, equally well. “In one hour,
+sir,” said Triplet, “the article shall be executed, and delivered at
+your house.”
+
+Mrs. Woffington called Vane to her, with an engaging smile. A month ago
+he would have hoped she would not have penetrated him and Sir Charles;
+but he knew her better now. He came trembling.
+
+“Look me in the face, Mr. Vane,” said she, gently, but firmly.
+
+“I cannot!” said he. “How can I ever look you in the face again?”
+
+“Ah! you disarm me! But I must strike you, or this will never end. Did
+I not promise that, when you had earned my _if_ esteem, I would
+tell you--what no mortal knows--Ernest, my whole story? I delay the
+confession. It will cost me so many blushes, so many tears! And yet I
+hope, if you knew all, you would pity and forgive me. Meantime, did I
+ever tell you a falsehood?”
+
+“Oh no!”
+
+“Why doubt me then, when I tell you that I hold all your sex cheap
+but you? Why suspect me of Heaven knows what, at the dictation of a
+heartless, brainless fop--on the word of a known liar, like the world?”
+
+Black lightning flashed from her glorious eyes as she administered this
+royal rebuke. Vane felt what a poor creature he was, and his face showed
+such burning shame and contrition, that he obtained his pardon without
+speaking.
+
+“There,” said she, kindly, “do not let us torment one another. I forgive
+you. Let me make you happy, Ernest. Is that a great favor to ask? I can
+make you happier than your brightest dream of happiness, if you will let
+yourself be happy.”
+
+They rejoined the others; but Vane turned his back on Pomander, and
+would not look at him.
+
+“Sir Charles,” said Mrs. Woffington gayly; for she scorned to admit the
+fine gentleman to the rank of a permanent enemy, “you will be of our
+party, I trust, at dinner?”
+
+“Why, no, madam; I fear I cannot give myself that pleasure to-day.” Sir
+Charles did not choose to swell the triumph. “Mr. Vane, good day!”
+ said he, rather dryly. “Mr. Triplet--madam--your most obedient!” and,
+self-possessed at top, but at bottom crestfallen, he bowed himself away.
+
+Sir Charles, however, on descending the stair and gaining the street,
+caught sight of a horseman, riding uncertainly about, and making his
+horse curvet, to attract attention.
+
+He soon recognized one of his own horses, and upon it the servant he had
+left behind to dog that poor innocent country lady. The servant sprang
+off his horse and touched his hat. He informed his master that he had
+kept with the carriage until ten o'clock this morning, when he had
+ridden away from it at Barnet, having duly pumped the servants as
+opportunity offered.
+
+“Who is she?” cried Sir Charles.
+
+“Wife of a Cheshire squire, Sir Charles,” was the reply.
+
+“His name? Whither goes she in town?”
+
+“Her name is Mrs. Vane, Sir Charles. She is going to her husband.”
+
+“Curious!” cried Sir Charles. “I wish she had no husband. No! I wish she
+came from Shropshire,” and he chuckled at the notion.
+
+“If you please, Sir Charles,” said the man, “is not Willoughby in
+Cheshire?”
+
+“No,” cried his master; “it is in Shropshire. What! eh! Five guineas for
+you if that lady comes from Willoughby in Shropshire.
+
+“That is where she comes from then, Sir Charles, and she is going to
+Bloomsbury Square.”
+
+“How long have they been married?”
+
+“Not more than twelve months, Sir Charles.”
+
+Pomander gave the man ten guineas instead of five on the spot.
+
+Reader, it was too true! Mr. Vane--the good, the decent, the
+churchgoer--Mr. Vane, whom Mrs. Woffington had selected to improve her
+morals--Mr. Vane was a married man!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+As soon as Pomander had drawn his breath and realized this discovery, he
+darted upstairs, and with all the demure calmness he could assume,
+told Mr. Vane, whom he met descending, that he was happy to find his
+engagements permitted him to join the party in Bloomsbury Square. He
+then flung himself upon his servant's horse.
+
+Like Iago, he saw the indistinct outline of a glorious and a most
+malicious plot; it lay crude in his head and heart at present; thus much
+he saw clearly, that, if he could time Mrs. Vane's arrival so that she
+should pounce upon the Woffington at her husband's table, he might be
+present at and enjoy the public discomfiture of a man and woman who
+had wounded his vanity. Bidding his servant make the best of his way
+to Bloomsbury Square, Sir Charles galloped in that direction himself,
+intending first to inquire whether Mrs. Vane was arrived, and, if not,
+to ride toward Islington and meet her. His plan was frustrated by an
+accident; galloping round a corner, his horse did not change his leg
+cleverly, and, the pavement being also loose, slipped and fell on his
+side, throwing his rider upon the _trottoir._ The horse got up and
+trembled violently, but was unhurt. The rider lay motionless, except
+that his legs quivered on the pavement. They took him up and conveyed
+him into a druggist's shop, the master of which practiced chirurgery. He
+had to be sent for; and, before he could be found, Sir Charles recovered
+his reason, so much so, that when the chirurgeon approached with his
+fleam to bleed him, according to the practice of the day, the patient
+drew his sword, and assured the other he would let out every drop of
+blood in his body if he touched him.
+
+He of the shorter but more lethal weapon hastily retreated. Sir Charles
+flung a guinea on the counter, and mounting his horse rode him off
+rather faster than before this accident.
+
+There was a dead silence!
+
+“I believe that gentleman to be the Devil!” said a thoughtful bystander.
+The crowd (it was a century ago) assented _nem. con._
+
+Sir Charles, arrived in Bloomsbury Square, found that the whole party
+was assembled. He therefore ordered his servant to parade before the
+door, and, if he saw Mrs. Vane's carriage enter the Square, to let him
+know, if possible, before she should reach the house. On entering he
+learned that Mr. Vane and his guests were in the garden (a very fine
+one), and joined them there.
+
+Mrs. Vane demands another chapter, in which I will tell the reader who
+she was, and what excuse her husband had for his liaison with Margaret
+Woffington.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+MABEL CHESTER was the beauty and toast of South Shropshire. She had
+refused the hand of half the country squires in a circle of some dozen
+miles, till at last Mr. Vane became her suitor. Besides a handsome face
+and person, Mr. Vane had accomplishments his rivals did not possess. He
+read poetry to her on mossy banks an hour before sunset, and awakened
+sensibilities which her other suitors shocked, and they them.
+
+The lovely Mabel had a taste for beautiful things, without any excess of
+that severe quality called judgment.
+
+I will explain. If you or I, reader, had read to her in the afternoon,
+amid the smell of roses and eglantine, the chirp of the mavis, the hum
+of bees, the twinkling of butterflies, and the tinkle of distant sheep,
+something that combined all these sights, and sounds, and smells--say
+Milton's musical picture of Eden, P. L., lib. 3, and after that “Triplet
+on Kew,” she would have instantly pronounced in favor of “Eden”; but
+if _we_ had read her “Milton,” and Mr. Vane had read her “Triplet,” she
+would have as unhesitatingly preferred “Kew” to “Paradise.”
+
+She was a true daughter of Eve; the lady, who, when an angel was telling
+her and her husband the truths of heaven in heaven's own music, slipped
+away into the kitchen, because she preferred hearing the story at
+second-hand, encumbered with digressions, and in mortal but marital
+accents.
+
+When her mother, who guarded Mabel like a dragon, told her Mr. Vane was
+not rich enough, and she really must not give him so many opportunities,
+Mabel cried and embraced the dragon, and said, “Oh, mother!” The
+dragon, finding her ferocity dissolving, tried to shake her off, but the
+goose would cry and embrace the dragon till it melted.
+
+By and by Mr. Vane's uncle died suddenly and left him the great
+Stoken Church estate, and a trunk full of Jacobuses and Queen Anne's
+guineas--his own hoard and his father's--then the dragon spake
+comfortably and said: “My child, he is now the richest man in
+Shropshire. He will not think of you now; so steel your heart.”
+
+Then Mabel, contrary to all expectations, did not cry; but, with
+flushing cheek, pledged her life upon Ernest's love and honor: and
+Ernest, as soon as the funeral, etc., left him free, galloped to Mabel,
+to talk of our good fortune. The dragon had done him injustice; that
+was not his weak point. So they were married! and they were very, very
+happy. But, one month after, the dragon died, and that was their first
+grief; but they bore it together.
+
+And Vane was not like the other Shropshire squires. His idea of pleasure
+was something his wife could share. He still rode, walked, and sat with
+her, and read to her, and composed songs for her, and about her, which
+she played and sang prettily enough, in her quiet, lady-like way, and in
+a voice of honey dropping from the comb. Then she kept a keen eye upon
+him; and, when she discovered what dishes he liked, she superintended
+those herself; and, observing that he never failed to eat of a certain
+lemon-pudding the dragon had originated, she always made this pudding
+herself, and she never told her husband she made it.
+
+The first seven months of their marriage was more like blue sky than
+brown earth; and if any one had told Mabel that her husband was a
+mortal, and not an angel, sent to her that her days and nights might
+be unmixed, uninterrupted heaven, she could hardly have realized the
+information.
+
+When a vexatious litigant began to contest the will by which Mr. Vane
+was Lord of Stoken Church, and Mr. Vane went up to London to concert
+the proper means of defeating this attack, Mrs. Vane would gladly have
+compounded by giving the man two or three thousand acres or the whole
+estate, if he wouldn't take less, not to rob her of her husband for
+a month; but she was docile, as she was amorous; so she cried (out of
+sight) a week; and let her darling go with every misgiving a loving
+heart could have; but one! and that one her own heart told her was
+impossible.
+
+The month rolled away--no symptom of a return. For this, Mr. Vane was
+not, in fact, to blame; but, toward the end of the next month, business
+became a convenient excuse. When three months had passed, Mrs. Vane
+became unhappy. She thought he too must feel the separation. She offered
+to come to him. He answered uncandidly. He urged the length, the fatigue
+of the journey. She was silenced; but some time later she began to take
+a new view of his objections. “He is so self-denying,” said she. “Dear
+Ernest, he longs for me; but he thinks it selfish to let me travel so
+far alone to see him.”
+
+Full of this idea, she yielded to her love. She made her preparations,
+and wrote to him, that, if he did not forbid her peremptorily, he must
+expect to see her at his breakfast-table in a very few days.
+
+Mr. Vane concluded this was a jest, and did not answer this letter at
+all.
+
+Mrs. Vane started. She traveled with all speed; but, coming to a halt
+at ----, she wrote to her husband that she counted on being with him at
+four of the clock on Thursday.
+
+This letter preceded her arrival by a few hours. It was put into his
+hand at the same time with a note from Mrs. Woffington, telling him she
+should be at a rehearsal at Covent Garden. Thinking his wife's letter
+would keep, he threw it on one side into a sort of a tray; and, after a
+hurried breakfast, went out of his house to the theater. He returned, as
+we are aware, with Mrs. Woffington; and also, at her request, with Mr.
+Cibber, for whom they had called on their way. He had forgotten his
+wife's letter, and was entirely occupied with his guests.
+
+Sir Charles Pomander joined them, and found Mr. Colander, the head
+domestic of the London establishment, cutting with a pair of scissors
+every flower Mrs. Woffington fancied, that lady having a passion for
+flowers.
+
+Colander, during his temporary absence from the interior, had appointed
+James Burdock to keep the house, and receive the two remaining guests,
+should they arrive.
+
+This James Burdock was a faithful old country servant, who had come up
+with Mr. Vane, but left his heart at Willoughby. James Burdock had for
+some time been ruminating, and his conclusion was, that his mistress,
+Miss Mabel (as by force of habit he called her), was not treated as she
+deserved.
+
+Burdock had been imported into Mr. Vane's family by Mabel; he had
+carried her in his arms when she was a child; he had held her upon a
+donkey when she was a little girl; and when she became a woman, it was
+he who taught her to stand close to her horse, and give him her foot and
+spring while he lifted her steadily but strongly into her saddle, and,
+when there, it was he who had instructed her that a horse was not a
+machine, that galloping tires it in time, and that galloping it on
+the hard road hammers it to pieces. “I taught the girl,” thought James
+within himself.
+
+This honest silver-haired old fellow seemed so ridiculous to Colander,
+the smooth, supercilious Londoner, that he deigned sometimes to converse
+with James, in order to quiz him. This very morning they had had a
+conversation.
+
+“Poor Miss Mabel! dear heart. A twelvemonth married, and nigh six months
+of it a widow, or next door.”
+
+“We write to her, James, and entertain her replies, which are at
+considerable length.”
+
+“Ay, but we don't read 'em!” said James, with an uneasy glance at the
+tray.
+
+“Invariably, at our leisure; meantime we make ourselves happy among the
+wits and the sirens.”
+
+“And she do make others happy among the poor and the ailing.”
+
+“Which shows,” said Colander, superciliously, “the difference of
+tastes.”
+
+Burdock, whose eye had never been off his mistress's handwriting, at
+last took it up and said: “Master Colander, do if ye please, sir, take
+this into master's dressing-room, do now?”
+
+Colander looked down on the missive with dilating eye. “Not a bill,
+James Burdock,” said he, reproachfully.
+
+“A bill! bless ye, no. A letter from missus.”
+
+No, the dog would not take it in to his master; and poor James, with a
+sigh, replaced it in the tray.
+
+This James Burdock, then, was left in charge of the hall by Colander,
+and it so happened that the change was hardly effected before a hurried
+knocking came to the street door.
+
+“Ay, ay!” grumbled Burdock, “I thought it would not be long. London for
+knocking and ringing all day, and ringing and knocking all night.” He
+opened the door reluctantly and suspiciously, and in darted a lady,
+whose features were concealed by a hood. She glided across the hall,
+as if she was making for some point, and old James shuffled after her,
+crying: “Stop, stop! young woman. What is your name, young woman?”
+
+“Why, James Burdock,” cried the lady, removing her hood, “have you
+forgotten your mistress?”
+
+“Mistress! Why, Miss Mabel, I ask your pardon, madam--here, John,
+Margery!”
+
+“Hush!” cried Mrs. Vane.
+
+“But where are your trunks, miss? And where's the coach, and Darby and
+Joan? To think of their drawing you all the way here! I'll have 'em into
+your room directly, ma'am. Miss, you've come just in time.”
+
+“What a dear, good, stupid old thing you are, James. Where is
+Ernest--Mr. Vane? James, is he well and happy? I want to surprise him.”
+
+“Yes, ma'am,” said James, looking down.
+
+“I left the old stupid coach at Islington, James. The something--pin was
+loose, or I don't know what. Could I wait two hours there? So I came on
+by myself; you wicked old man, you let me talk, and don't tell me how he
+is.”
+
+“Master is main well, ma'am, and thank you,” said old Burdock, confused
+and uneasy.
+
+“But is he happy? Of course he is. Are we not to meet to-day after six
+months? Ah! but never mind, they _are_ gone by.”
+
+“Lord bless her!” thought the faithful old fellow. “If sitting down and
+crying could help her, I wouldn't be long.”
+
+By this time they were in the banqueting-room and at the preparations
+there Mabel gave a start; she then colored. “Oh, he has invited his
+friends to make acquaintance. I had rather we had been alone all this
+day and to-morrow. But he must not know that. No; _his_ friends are _my_
+friends, and shall be too,” thought the country wife. She then glanced
+with some misgiving at her traveling attire, and wished she had brought
+_one_ trunk with her.
+
+“James,” said she, “where is my room? And, mind, I forbid you to tell a
+soul I am come.”
+
+“Your room, Miss Mabel?”
+
+“Well, any room where there is looking-glass and water.”
+
+She then went to a door which opened in fact on a short passage leading
+to a room occupied by Mr. Vane himself.
+
+“No, no!” cried James. “That is master's room.”
+
+“Well, is not master's room mistress's room, old man? But stay; is he
+there?”
+
+“No, ma'am; he is in the garden, with a power of fine folks.”
+
+“They shall not see me till I have made myself a little more decent,”
+ said the young beauty, who knew at bottom how little comparatively
+the color of her dress could affect her appearance, and she opened Mr.
+Vane's door and glided in.
+
+Burdock's first determination was, in spite of her injunction, to tell
+Colander; but on reflection he argued: “And then what will they do?
+They will put their heads together, and deceive us some other way. No!”
+ thought James, with a touch of spite, “we shall see how they will all
+look.” He argued also, that, at sight of his beautiful wife, his master
+must come to his senses, and the Colander faction be defeated; and
+perhaps, by the mercy of Providence, Colander himself turned off.
+
+While thus ruminating, a thundering knock at the door almost knocked him
+off his legs. “There ye go again,” said he, and he went angrily to the
+door. This time it was Hunsdon, who was in a desperate hurry to see his
+master.
+
+“Where is Sir Charles Pomander, my honest fellow?” said he.
+
+“In the garden, my Jack-a-dandy!” said Burdock, furiously.
+
+(“Honest fellow,” among servants, implies some moral inferiority.)
+
+In the garden went Hunsdon. His master--all whose senses were playing
+sentinel--saw him, and left the company to meet him.
+
+“She is in the house, sir.”
+
+“Good! Go--vanish!”
+
+Sir Charles looked into the banquet-room; the haunch was being placed on
+the table. He returned with the information. He burned to bring husband
+and wife together; he counted each second lost that postponed this (to
+him) thrilling joy. Oh, how happy he was!--happier than the serpent when
+he saw Eve's white teeth really strike into the apple!
+
+“Shall we pay respect to this haunch, Mr. Quin?” said Vane, gayly.
+
+“If you please, sir,” said Quin, gravely. Colander ran down a by-path
+with an immense bouquet, which he arranged for Mrs. Woffington in a vase
+at Mr. Vane's left hand. He then threw open the windows, which were on
+the French plan, and shut within a foot of the lawn.
+
+The musicians in the arbor struck up, and the company, led by Mr.
+Vane and Mrs. Woffington, entered the room. And a charming room it
+was!--light, lofty, and large--adorned in the French way with white and
+gold. The table was an exact oval, and at it everybody could hear what
+any one said; an excellent arrangement where ideaed guests only are
+admitted--which is another excellent arrangement, though I see people
+don't think so.
+
+The repast was luxurious and elegant. There was no profusion of
+unmeaning dishes; each was a _bonne-bouche_--an undeniable delicacy. The
+glass was beautiful, the plates silver. The flowers rose like walls
+from the table; the plate massive and glorious; rose-water in the
+hand-glasses; music crept in from the garden, deliciously subdued into
+what seemed a natural sound. A broad stream of southern sun gushed in
+fiery gold through the open window, and, like a red-hot rainbow, danced
+through the stained glass above it. Existence was a thing to bask in--in
+such a place, and so happy an hour!
+
+The guests were Quin, Mrs. Clive, Mr. Cibber, Sir Charles Pomander, Mrs.
+Woffington, and Messrs. Soaper and Snarl, critics of the day. This pair,
+with wonderful sagacity, had arrived from the street as the haunch
+came from the kitchen. Good-humor reigned; some cuts passed, but as the
+parties professed wit, they gave and took.
+
+Quin carved the haunch, and was happy; Soaper and Snarl eating the same,
+and drinking Toquay, were mellowed and mitigated into human flesh. Mr.
+Vane and Mrs. Woffington were happy; he, because his conscience was
+asleep; and she, because she felt nothing now could shake her hold of
+him. Sir Charles was in a sort of mental chuckle. His head burned, his
+bones ached; but he was in a sort of nervous delight.
+
+“Where is she?” thought he. “What will she do? Will she send her maid
+with a note? How blue he will look! Or will she come herself? She is a
+country wife; there must be a scene. Oh, why doesn't she come into this
+room? She must know we are here! is she watching somewhere?” His brain
+became puzzled, and his senses were sharpened to a point; he was all
+eye, ear and expectation; and this was why he was the only one to hear
+a very slight sound behind the door we have mentioned, and next to
+perceive a lady's glove lying close to that door. Mabel had dropped it
+in her retreat. Putting this and that together, he was led to hope and
+believe she was there, making her toilet, perhaps, and her arrival at
+present unknown.
+
+“Do you expect no one else?” said he, with feigned carelessness, to Mr.
+Vane.
+
+“No,” said Mr. Vane, with real carelessness.
+
+“It must be so! What fortune!” thought Pomander.
+
+_Soaper._ “Mr. Cibber looks no older than he did five years ago.”
+
+_Snarl._ “There was no room on his face for a fresh wrinkle.”
+
+_Soaper._ “He! he! Nay, Mr. Snarl: Mr. Cibber is like old port; the more
+ancient he grows, the more delicious his perfume.”
+
+_Snarl._ “And the crustier he gets.”
+
+_Clive._ “Mr. Vane, you should always separate those two. Snarl, by
+himself, is just supportable; but, when Soaper paves the way with his
+hypocritical praise, the pair are too much; they are a two-edged sword.”
+
+_Woffington._ “Wanting nothing but polish and point.”
+
+_Vane._ “Gentlemen, we abandon your neighbor, Mr. Quin, to you.”
+
+_Quin._ “They know better. If they don't keep a civil tongue in their
+heads, no fat goes from here to them.”
+
+_Cibber._ “Ah, Mr. Vane; this room is delightful; but it makes me sad. I
+knew this house in Lord Longueville's time; an unrivaled gallant, Peggy.
+You may just remember him, Sir Charles?”
+
+_Pomander_ (with his eye on a certain door). “Yes, yes; a gouty old
+fellow.”
+
+Cibber fired up. “I wish you may ever be like him. Oh, the beauty, the
+wit, the _petits-soupers_ that used to be here! Longueville was a great
+creature, Mr. Vane. I have known him entertain a fine lady in this room,
+while her rival was fretting and fuming on the other side of that door.”
+
+“Ah, indeed!” said Sir Charles.
+
+“More shame for him,” said Mr. Vane.
+
+Here was luck! Pomander seized this opportunity of turning the
+conversation to his object. With a malicious twinkle in his eye, he
+inquired of Mr. Cibber what made him fancy the house had lost its virtue
+in Mr. Vane's hands.
+
+“Because,” said Cibber, peevishly, “you all want the true _savoir faire_
+nowadays, because there is no _juste milieu,_ young gentlemen. The young
+dogs of the day are all either unprincipled heathen, like yourself, or
+Amadisses, like our worthy host.” The old gentleman's face and manners
+were like those of a patriarch, regretting the general decay of virtue,
+not the imaginary diminution of a single vice. He concluded with a sigh
+that, “The true _preux des dames_ went out with the full periwig; stab
+my vitals!”
+
+“A bit of fat, Mr. Cibber?” said Quin, whose jokes were not polished.
+
+“Jemmy, thou art a brute,” was the reply.
+
+“You refuse, sir?” said Quin, sternly.
+
+“No, sir!” said Cibber, with dignity. “I accept.”
+
+Pomander's eye was ever on the door.
+
+“The old are so unjust to the young,” said he. “You pretend that the
+Deluge washed away iniquity, and that a rake is a fossil. What,” said
+he, leaning as it were on every word, “if I bet you a cool hundred
+that Vane has a petticoat in that room, and that Mrs. Woffington shall
+unearth her?”
+
+The malicious dog thought this was the surest way to effect a dramatic
+exposure, because if Peggy found Mabel to all appearances concealed,
+Peggy would scold her, and betray herself.
+
+“Pomander!” cried Vane, in great heat; then, checking himself, he said
+coolly: “but you all know Pomander.”
+
+“None of you,” replied that gentleman. “Bring a chair, sir,” said he,
+authoritatively, to a servant; who, of course, obeyed.
+
+Mrs. Clive looked at him, and thought: “There is something in this!”
+
+“It is for the lady,” said he, coolly. Then, leaning over the table,
+he said to Mrs. Woffington, with an impudent affectation of friendly
+understanding: “I ran her to earth in this house not ten minutes ago.
+Of course I don't know who she is! But,” smacking his lips, “a rustic
+Amaryllis, breathing all May-buds and Meadowsweet.”
+
+“Have her out, Peggy!” shouted Cibber. “I know the run--there's the
+covert! Hark, forward! Ha, ha, ha!”
+
+Mr. Vane rose, and, with a sternness that brought the old beau up with
+a run, he said: “Mr. Cibber, age and infirmity are privileged; but for
+you, Sir Charles--”
+
+“Don't be angry,” interposed Mrs. Woffington, whose terror was lest he
+should quarrel with so practiced a swordsman. “Don't you see it is a
+jest! and, as might be expected from poor Sir Charles, a very sorry one.
+
+“A jest!” said Vane, white with rage. “Let it go no further, or it will
+be earnest!”
+
+Mrs. Woffington placed her hand on his shoulder, and at that touch he
+instantly yielded, and sat down.
+
+It was at this moment, when Sir Charles found himself for the present
+baffled--for he could no longer press his point, and search that room;
+when the attention of all was drawn to a dispute, which, for a moment,
+had looked like a quarrel; while Mrs. Woffington's hand still lingered,
+as only a woman's hand can linger in leaving the shoulder of the man she
+loves; it was at this moment the door opened of its own accord, and a
+most beautiful woman stood, with a light step, upon the threshold!
+
+Nobody's back was to her, except Mr. Vane's. Every eye but his was
+spellbound upon her.
+
+Mrs. Woffington withdrew her hand, as if a scorpion had touched her.
+
+A stupor of astonishment fell on them all.
+
+Mr. Vane, seeing the direction of all their eyes, slewed himself round
+in his chair into a most awkward position, and when he saw the lady, he
+was utterly dumfounded! But she, as soon as he turned his face her way,
+glided up to him, with a little half-sigh, half-cry of joy, and taking
+him round the neck, kissed him deliciously, while every eye at the table
+met every other eye in turn. One or two of the men rose; for the lady's
+beauty was as worthy of homage as her appearing was marvelous.
+
+Mrs. Woffington, too astonished for emotion to take any definite shape,
+said, in what seemed an ordinary tone: “Who is this lady?”
+
+“I am his wife, madam,” said Mabel, in the voice of a skylark, and
+smiling friendly on the questioner.
+
+“It is my wife!” said Vane, like a speaking-machine; he was scarcely in
+a conscious state. “It is my wife!” he repeated, mechanically.
+
+The words were no sooner out of Mabel's mouth than two servants, who had
+never heard of Mrs. Vane before, hastened to place on Mr. Vane's right
+hand the chair Pomander had provided, a plate and napkin were there in a
+twinkling, and the wife modestly, but as a matter of course, courtesied
+low, with an air of welcome to all her guests, and then glided into the
+seat her servants obsequiously placed before her.
+
+The whole thing did not take half a minute!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+MR. VANE, besides being a rich, was a magnificent man; when his features
+were in repose their beauty had a wise and stately character. Soaper and
+Snarl had admired and bitterly envied him. At the present moment no one
+of his guests envied him--they began to realize his position. And he, a
+huge wheel of shame and remorse, began to turn and whir before his
+eyes. He sat between two European beauties, and, pale and red by turns,
+shunned the eyes of both, and looked down at his plate in a cold sweat
+of humiliation, mortification and shame.
+
+The iron passed through Mrs. Woffington's soul. So! this was a villain,
+too, the greatest villain of all--a hypocrite! She turned very faint,
+but she was under an enemy's eye, and under a rival's; the thought
+drove the blood back from her heart, and with a mighty effort she was
+Woffington again. Hitherto her liaison with Mr. Vane had called up the
+better part of her nature, and perhaps our reader has been taking her
+for a good woman; but now all her dregs were stirred to the surface. The
+mortified actress gulled by a novice, the wronged and insulted woman,
+had but two thoughts; to defeat her rival--to be revenged on her false
+lover. More than one sharp spasm passed over her features before she
+could master them, and then she became smiles above, wormwood and
+red-hot steel below--all in less than half a minute.
+
+As for the others, looks of keen intelligence passed between them, and
+they watched with burning interest for the _denouement._ That interest
+was stronger than their sense of the comicality of all this (for the
+humorous view of what passes before our eyes comes upon cool reflection,
+not often at the time).
+
+Sir Charles, indeed, who had foreseen some of this, wore a demure look,
+belied by his glittering eye. He offered Cibber snuff, and the two
+satirical animals grinned over the snuff-box, like a malicious old ape
+and a mischievous young monkey.
+
+The newcomer was charming; she was above the middle height, of a
+full, though graceful figure, her abundant, glossy, bright brown hair
+glittered here and there like gold in the light; she had a snowy brow,
+eyes of the profoundest blue, a cheek like a peach, and a face beaming
+candor and goodness; the character of her countenance resembled “the
+Queen of the May,” in Mr. Leslie's famous picture, more than any face of
+our day I can call to mind.
+
+“You are not angry with me for this silly trick?” said she, with some
+misgiving. “After all I am only two hours before my time; you know,
+dearest, I said four in my letter--did I not?”
+
+Vane stammered. What could he say?
+
+“And you have had three days to prepare you, for I wrote, like a good
+wife, to ask leave before starting; but he never so much as answered my
+letter, madam.” (This she addressed to Mrs. Woffington, who smiled by
+main force.)
+
+“Why,” stammered Vane, “could you doubt? I--I--”
+
+“No! Silence was consent, was it not? But I beg your pardon, ladies
+and gentlemen, I hope you will forgive me. It is six months since I saw
+him--so you understand--I warrant me you did not look for me so soon,
+ladies?”
+
+“Some of us did not look for you at all, madam,” said Mrs. Woffington.
+
+“What, Ernest did not tell you he expected me?”
+
+“No! He told us this banquet was in honor of a lady's first visit to his
+house, but none of us imagined that lady to be his wife.”
+
+Vane began to writhe under that terrible tongue, whose point hitherto
+had ever been turned away from him.
+
+“He intended to steal a march on us,” said Pomander, dryly; “and, with
+your help, we steal one on him;” and he smiled maliciously on Mrs.
+Woffington.
+
+“But, madam,” said Mr. Quin, “the moment you did arrive, I kept sacred
+for you a bit of the fat; for which, I am sure, you must be ready. Pass
+her plate!”
+
+“Not at present, Mr. Quin,” said Mr. Vane, hastily. “She is about to
+retire and change her traveling-dress.”
+
+“Yes, dear; but, you forget, I am a stranger to your friends. Will you
+not introduce me to them first?”
+
+“No, no!” cried Vane, in trepidation. “It is not usual to introduce in
+the _beau monde.”_
+
+“We always introduce ourselves,” rejoined Mrs. Woffington. She rose
+slowly, with her eye on Vane. He cast a look of abject entreaty on her;
+but there was no pity in that curling lip and awful eye. He closed his
+own eyes and waited for the blow. Sir Charles threw himself back in his
+chair, and, chuckling, prepared for the explosion. Mrs. Woffington saw
+him, and cast on him a look of ineffable scorn; and then she held the
+whole company fluttering a long while. At length: “The Honorable Mrs.
+Quickly, madam,” said she, indicating Mrs. Clive.
+
+This turn took them all by surprise. Pomander bit his lip.
+
+“Sir John Brute--”
+
+“Falstaff,” cried Quin; “hang it.”
+
+“Sir John Brute Falstaff,” resumed Mrs. Woffington. “We call him, for
+brevity, Brute.”
+
+Vane drew a long breath. “Your neighbor is Lord Foppington; a butterfly
+of some standing, and a little gouty.”
+
+“Sir Charles Pomander.”
+
+“Oh,” cried Mrs. Vane. “It is the good gentleman who helped us out
+of the slough, near Huntingdon. Ernest, if it had not been for this
+gentleman, I should not have had the pleasure of being here now.” And
+she beamed on the good Pomander.
+
+Mr. Vane did not rise and embrace Sir Charles.
+
+“All the company thanks the good Sir Charles,” said Cibber, bowing.
+
+“I see it in all their faces,” said the good Sir Charles, dryly.
+
+Mrs. Woffington continued: “Mr. Soaper, Mr. Snarl; gentlemen who would
+butter and slice up their own fathers!”
+
+“Bless me!” cried Mrs. Vane, faintly.
+
+“Critics!” And she dropped, as it were, the word dryly, with a sweet
+smile, into Mabel's plate.
+
+Mrs. Vane was relieved; she had apprehended cannibals. London they had
+told her was full of curiosities.
+
+“But yourself, madam?”
+
+“I am the Lady Betty Modish; at your service.”
+
+A four-inch grin went round the table. The dramatical old rascal,
+Cibber, began now to look at it as a bit of genteel comedy; and slipped
+out his note-book under the table. Pomander cursed her ready wit, which
+had disappointed him of his catastrophe. Vane wrote on a slip of paper:
+“Pity and respect the innocent!” and passed it to Mrs. Woffington. He
+could not have done a more superfluous or injudicious thing.
+
+“And now, Ernest,” cried Mabel, “for the news from Willoughby.”
+
+Vane stopped her in dismay. He felt how many satirical eyes and ears
+were upon him and his wife. “Pray go and change your dress first,
+Mabel,” cried he, fully determined that on her return she should not
+find the present party there.
+
+Mrs. Vane cast an imploring look on Mrs. Woffington. “My things are not
+come,” said she. “And, Lady Betty, I had so much to tell him, and to be
+sent away;” and the deep blue eyes began to fill.
+
+Now Mrs. Woffington was determined that this lady, who she saw was
+simple, should disgust her husband by talking twaddle before a band of
+satirists. So she said warmly: “It is not fair on us. Pray, madam, your
+budget of country news. Clouted cream so seldom comes to London quite
+fresh.”
+
+“There, you see, Ernest,” said the unsuspicious soul. “First, you must
+know that Gray Gillian is turned out for a brood mare, so old George
+won't let me ride her; old servants are such tyrants, my lady. And my
+Barbary hen has laid two eggs; Heaven knows the trouble we had to bring
+her to it. And Dame Best, that is my husband's old nurse, Mrs. Quickly,
+has had soup and pudding from the Hall everyday; and once she went so
+far as to say it wasn't altogether a bad pudding. She is not a very
+grateful woman, in a general way, poor thing! I made it with these
+hands.”
+
+Vane writhed.
+
+“Happy pudding!” observed Mr. Cibber.
+
+“Is this mockery, sir?” cried Vane, with a sudden burst of irritation.
+
+“No, sir; it is gallantry,” replied Cibber, with perfect coolness.
+
+“Will you hear a little music in the garden?” said Vane to Mrs.
+Woffington, pooh-poohing his wife's news.
+
+“Not till I hear the end of Dame Bess.”
+
+“Best, my lady.”
+
+“Dame Best interests _me,_ Mr. Vane.”
+
+“Ay, and Ernest is very fond of her, too, when he is at home. She is in
+her nice new cottage, dear; but she misses the draughts that were in
+her old one--they were like old friends. 'The only ones I have, I'm
+thinking,' said the dear cross old thing; and there stood I, on her
+floor, with a flannel petticoat in both hands, that I had made for her,
+and ruined my finger. Look else, my Lord Foppington?” She extended a
+hand the color of cream.
+
+“Permit me, madam?” taking out his glasses, with which he inspected her
+finger; and gravely announced to the company: “The laceration is, in
+fact, discernible. May I be permitted, madam,” added he, “to kiss this
+fair hand, which I should never have suspected of having ever made
+itself half so useful?”
+
+“Ay, my lord!” said she, coloring slightly, “you shall, because you are
+so old; but I don't say for a young gentleman, unless it was the one
+that belongs to me; and he does not ask me.”
+
+“My dear Mabel; pray remember we are not at Willoughby.”
+
+“I see we are not, Ernest.” And the dove-like eyes filled brimful; and
+all her innocent prattle was put an end to.
+
+“What brutes men are,” thought Mrs. Woffington. “They are not worthy
+even of a fool like this.”
+
+Mr. Vane once more pressed her to hear a little music in the garden;
+and this time she consented. Mr. Vane was far from being unmoved by
+his wife's arrival, and her true affection. But she worried him; he
+was anxious, above all things, to escape from his present position, and
+separate the rival queens; and this was the only way he could see to do
+it. He whispered Mabel, and bade her somewhat peremptorily rest herself
+for an hour after her journey, and he entered the garden with Mrs.
+Woffington.
+
+Now the other gentlemen admired Mrs. Vane the most. She was new. She was
+as lovely, in her way, as Peggy; and it was the young May-morn beauty
+of the country. They forgave her simplicity, and even her goodness, on
+account of her beauty; men are not severe judges of beautiful women.
+They all solicited her to come with them, and be the queen of the
+garden. But the good wife was obedient. Her lord had told her she was
+fatigued; so she said she was tired.
+
+“Mr. Vane's garden will lack its sweetest and fairest flower, madam,”
+ cried Cibber, “if we leave you here.”
+
+“Nay, my lord, there are fairer than I.”
+
+“Poor Quin!” cried Kitty Clive; “to have to leave the alderman's walk
+for the garden-walk.”
+
+“All I regret,” said the honest glutton, stoutly, “is that I go without
+carving for Mrs. Vane.”
+
+“You are very good, Sir John; I will be more troublesome to you at
+supper-time.”
+
+When they were all gone, she couldn't help sighing. It almost seemed as
+if everybody was kinder to her than he whose kindness alone she valued.
+“And he must take Lady Betty's hand instead of mine,” thought she. “But
+that is good breeding, I suppose. I wish there was no such thing; we
+are very happy without it in Shropshire.” Then this poor little soul was
+ashamed of herself, and took herself to task. “Poor Ernest,” said she,
+pitying the wrongdoer, like a woman, “he was not pleased to be so taken
+by surprise. No wonder; they are so ceremonious in London. How good of
+him not to be angry!” Then she sighed; her heart had received a damp.
+His voice seemed changed, and he did not meet her eyes with the look he
+wore at Willoughby. She looked timidly into the garden. She saw the gay
+colors of beaux, as well as of belles--for in these days broadcloth had
+not displaced silk and velvet--glancing and shining among the trees; and
+she sighed, but, presently brightening up a little, she said: “I will go
+and see that the coffee is hot and clear, and the chocolate well mixed
+for them.” The poor child wanted to do something to please her husband.
+Before she could carry out this act of domestic virtue, her attention
+was drawn to a strife of tongues in the hall. She opened the
+folding-doors, and there was a fine gentleman obstructing the entrance
+of a somber, rusty figure, with a portfolio and a manuscript under each
+arm.
+
+The fine gentleman was Colander. The seedy personage was the eternal
+Triplet, come to make hay with his five-foot rule while the sun shone.
+Colander had opened the door to him, and he had shot into the hall. The
+major-domo obstructed the farther entrance of such a coat.
+
+“I tell you my master is not at home,” remonstrated the major-domo.
+
+“How can you say so,” cried Mrs. Vane, in surprise, “when you know he is
+in the garden?”
+
+“Simpleton!” thought Colander.
+
+“Show the gentleman in.”
+
+“Gentleman!” muttered Colander.
+
+Triplet thanked her for her condescension; he would wait for Mr. Vane in
+the hall. “I came by appointment, madam; this is the only excuse for the
+importunity you have just witnessed.”
+
+Hearing this, Mrs. Vane dismissed Colander to inform his master.
+Colander bowed loftily, and walked into the servants' hall without
+deigning to take the last proposition into consideration.
+
+“Come in here, sir,” said Mabel; “Mr. Vane will come as soon as he can
+leave his company.” Triplet entered in a series of obsequious jerks.
+“Sit down and rest you, sir.” And Mrs. Vane seated herself at the table,
+and motioned with her white hand to Triplet to sit beside her.
+
+Triplet bowed, and sat on the edge of a chair, and smirked and dropped
+his portfolio, and instantly begged Mrs. Vane's pardon; in taking it up,
+he let fall his manuscript, and was again confused; but in the middle
+of some superfluous and absurd excuse his eye fell on the haunch; it
+straightway dilated to an enormous size, and he became suddenly silent
+and absorbed in contemplation.
+
+“You look sadly tired, sir.”
+
+“Why, yes, madam. It is a long way from Lambeth Walk, and it is passing
+hot, madam.” He took his handkerchief out, and was about to wipe his
+brow, but returned it hastily to his pocket. “I beg your pardon, madam,”
+ said Triplet, whose ideas of breeding, though speculative, were severe,
+“I forgot myself.”
+
+Mabel looked at him, and colored, and slightly hesitated. At last she
+said: “I'll be bound you came in such a hurry you forgot--you mustn't be
+angry with me--to have your dinner first!”
+
+For Triplet looked like an absurd wolf--all benevolence and starvation!
+
+“What divine intelligence!” thought Trip. “How strange, madam,” cried
+he, “you have hit it! This accounts, at once, for a craving I feel. Now
+you remind me, I recollect carving for others, I did forget to remember
+myself. Not that I need have forgot it to-day, madam; but, being used to
+forget it, I did not remember not to forget it to-day, madam, that was
+all.” And the author of this intelligent account smiled very, very, very
+absurdly.
+
+She poured him out a glass of wine. He rose and bowed; but peremptorily
+refused it, with his tongue--his eye drank it.
+
+“But you must,” persisted this hospitable lady.
+
+“But, madam, consider I am not entitled to--Nectar, as I am a man!”
+
+The white hand was filling his plate with partridge pie: “But, madam,
+you don't consider how you overwhelm me with your--Ambrosia, as I am a
+poet!”
+
+“I am sorry Mr. Vane should keep you waiting.”
+
+“By no means, madam; it is fortunate--I mean, it procures me the
+pleasure of” (here articulation became obstructed) “your society, madam.
+Besides, the servants of the Muse are used to waiting. What we are not
+used to is” (here the white hand filled his glass) “being waited upon
+by Hebe and the Twelve Graces, whose health I have the honor
+“--(Deglutition).
+
+“A poet!” cried Mabel; “oh! I am so glad! Little did I think ever to see
+a living poet! Dear heart! I should not have known, if you had not told
+me. Sir, I love poetry!”
+
+“It is in your face, madam.” Triplet instantly whipped out his
+manuscript, put a plate on one corner of it, and a decanter on the
+other, and begged her opinion of this trifle, composed, said he, “in
+honor of a lady Mr. Vane entertains to-day.”
+
+“Oh!” said Mrs. Vane, and colored with pleasure. How ungrateful she had
+been! Here was an attention!--For, of course, she never doubted that the
+verses were in honor of her arrival.
+
+“'Bright being--'” sang out Triplet.
+
+“Nay, sir,” said Mabel; “I think I know the lady, and it would be hardly
+proper of me--”
+
+“Oh, madam!” said Triplet, solemnly; “strictly correct, madam!” And
+he spread his hand out over his bosom. “Strictly!--'Blunderbuss' (my
+poetical name, madam) never stooped to the taste of the town.
+
+ 'Bright being, thou--'”
+
+“But you must have another glass of wine first, and a slice of the
+haunch.”
+
+“With alacrity, madam.” He laid in a fresh stock of provisions.
+
+Strange it was to see them side by side! _he,_ a Don Quixote, with
+cordage instead of lines in his mahogany face, and clothes hanging upon
+him; _she,_ smooth, duck-like, delicious, and bright as an opening rose
+fresh with dew!
+
+She watched him kindly, archly and demurely; and still plied him,
+countrywise, with every mortal thing on the table.
+
+But the poet was not a boa-constrictor, and even a boa-constrictor has
+an end. Hunger satisfied, his next strongest feeling, simple vanity,
+remained to be contented. As the last morsel went in out came:
+
+“'Bright being, thou whose ra--'”
+
+“No! no!” said she, who fancied herself (and not without reason) the
+bright being. “Mr. Vane intended them for a surprise.”
+
+“As you please, madam;” and the disappointed bore sighed. “But you
+would have liked them, for the theme inspired me. The kindest, the most
+generous of women! Don't you agree with me, madam?”
+
+Mabel Vane opened her eyes. “Hardly, sir,” laughed she.
+
+“If you knew her as I do.”
+
+“I ought to know her better, sir.”
+
+“Ay, indeed! Well, madam, now her kindness to me, for instance--a poor
+devil like me. The expression, I trust, is not disagreeable to you,
+madam? If so, forgive me, and consider it withdrawn.”
+
+“La, sir! civility is so cheap, if you go to that.”
+
+“Civility, ma'am? Why, she has saved me from despair--from starvation,
+perhaps.”
+
+“Poor thing! Well, indeed, sir, you looked--you looked--what a shame!
+and you a poet.”
+
+“From an epitaph to an epic, madam.”
+
+At this moment a figure looked in upon them from the garden, but
+retreated unobserved. It was Sir Charles Pomander, who had slipped away,
+with the heartless and malicious intention of exposing the husband to
+the wife, and profiting by her indignation and despair. Seeing Triplet,
+he made an extemporaneous calculation that so infernal a chatterbox
+could not be ten minutes in her company without telling her everything,
+and this would serve his turn very well. He therefore postponed his
+purpose, and strolled away to a short distance.
+
+Triplet justified the baronet's opinion. Without any sort of sequency
+he now informed Mrs. Vane that the benevolent lady was to sit to him for
+her portrait.
+
+Here was a new attention of Ernest's. How good he was, and how wicked
+and ungrateful she!
+
+“What! are you a painter too?” she inquired.
+
+“From a house front to an historical composition, madam.”
+
+“Oh, what a clever man! And so Ernest commissioned you to paint a
+portrait?”
+
+“No, madam; for that I am indebted to the lady herself.”
+
+“The lady herself?”
+
+“Yes, madam; and I expected to find her here. Will you add to your
+kindness by informing me whether she has arrived? Or she is gone--”
+
+“Who, sir? (Oh, dear! not my portrait! Oh, Ernest!)”
+
+“Who, madam!” cried Triplet; “why, Mrs. Woffington!”
+
+“She is not here,” said Mrs. Vane, who remembered all the names
+perfectly well. “There is one charming lady among our guests, her
+face took me in a moment; but she is a titled lady. There is no Mrs.
+Woffington among them.”
+
+“Strange!” replied Triplet; “she was to be here; and, in fact, that is
+why I expedited these lines in her honor.”
+
+“In _her_ honor, sir?”
+
+“Yes, madam. Allow me:
+
+ 'Brights being, thou whose radiant brow--'”
+
+“No! no! I don't care to hear them now, for I don't know the lady.”
+
+“Well, madam, but at least you have seen her act?”
+
+“Act! you don't mean all this is for an actress?”
+
+_“An_ actress? _The_ actress! And you have never seen her act? What a
+pleasure you have to come! To see her act is a privilege; but to act
+with her, as _I_ once did! But she does not remember that, nor shall
+I remind her, madam,” said Triplet sternly. “On that occasion I was
+hissed, owing to circumstances which, for the credit of our common
+nature, I suppress.”
+
+“What! are you an actor too? You are everything.”
+
+“And it was in a farce of my own, madam, which, by the strangest
+combination of accidents, was damned!”
+
+“A play-writer? Oh, what clever men there are in the world--in London,
+at least! He is a play-writer, too. I wonder my husband comes not. Does
+Mr. Vane--does Mr. Vane admire this actress?” said she, suddenly.
+
+“Mr. Vane, madam, is a gentleman of taste,” said he, pompously.
+
+“Well, sir,” said the lady, languidly, “she is not here.” Triplet took
+the hint and rose. “Good-by,” said she, sweetly; and thank you kindly
+for your company.
+
+“Triplet, madam--James Triplet, of 10, Hercules Buildings, Lambeth.
+Occasional verses, odes, epithalamia, elegies, dedications, squibs,
+impromptus and hymns executed with spirit, punctuality and secrecy.
+Portraits painted, and instruction in declamation, sacred, profane and
+dramatic. The card, madam” (and he drew it as doth a theatrical fop
+his rapier) “of him who, to all these qualifications adds a prouder
+still--that of being,
+
+“Madam,
+
+“Your humble, devoted and grateful servant,
+
+“JAMES TRIPLET.”
+
+
+He bowed in a line from his right shoulder to his left toe, and moved
+off. But Triplet could not go all at one time out of such company; he
+was given to return in real life, he had played this trick so often on
+the stage. He came back, exuberant with gratitude.
+
+“The fact is, madam,” said he, “strange as it may appear to you, a kind
+hand has not so often been held out to me, that I should forget it,
+especially when that hand is so fair and gracious. May I be permitted,
+madam--you will impute it to gratitude rather than audacity--I--I--”
+ (whimper), “madam” (with sudden severity), “I am gone!”
+
+These last words he pronounced with the right arm at an angle of
+forty-five degrees, and the fingers pointing horizontally. The stage had
+taught him this grace also. In his day, an actor who had three words to
+say, such as, “My lord's carriage is waiting,” came on the stage with
+the right arm thus elevated, delivered his message in the tones of a
+falling dynasty, wheeled like a soldier, and retired with the left
+arm pointing to the sky and the right hand extended behind him like a
+setter's tail.
+
+Left to herself, Mabel was uneasy. “Ernest is so warm-hearted.” This was
+the way she put it even to herself. He admired her acting and wished to
+pay her a compliment. “What if I carried him the verses?” She thought
+she should surely please him by showing she was not the least jealous
+or doubtful of him. The poor child wanted so to win a kind look from
+her husband; but ere she could reach the window Sir Charles Pomander had
+entered it.
+
+Now Sir Charles was naturally welcome to Mrs. Vane; for all she knew of
+him was, that he had helped her on the road to her husband.
+
+_Pomander._ “What, madam! all alone here as in Shropshire?”
+
+_Mabel._ “For the moment, sir.”
+
+_Pomander._ “Force of habit. A husband with a wife in Shropshire is so
+like a bachelor.”
+
+_Mabel._ “Sir!”
+
+_Pomander._ “And our excellent Ernest is such a favorite!”
+
+_Mabel._ “No wonder, sir!”
+
+_Pomander._ “Few can so pass from the larva state of country squire to
+the butterfly nature of beau.”
+
+_Mabel._ “Yes” (sadly), “I find him changed.”
+
+_Pomander._ “Changed! Transformed. He is now the prop of the
+'Cocoa-Tree,' the star of Ranelagh, the Lauzun of the green-room.”
+
+_Mabel._ “The green-room! Where is that? You mean kindly, sir; but you
+make me unhappy.”
+
+_Pomander._ “The green-room, my dear madam, is the bower where houris
+put off their wings, and goddesses become dowdies; where Lady Macbeth
+weeps over her lap-dog, dead from repletion; and Belvidera soothes her
+broken heart with a dozen of oysters. In a word, it is the place where
+actors and actresses become men and women, and act their own parts with
+skill, instead of a poet's clumsily.”
+
+_Mabel._ “Actors! actresses! Does Mr. Vane frequent such--”
+
+_Pomander._ “He has earned in six months a reputation many a fine
+gentleman would give his ears for. Not a scandalous journal his initials
+have not figured in; not an actress of reputation gossip has not given
+him for a conquest.”
+
+“How dare you say this to me?” cried Mrs. Vane, with a sudden flash of
+indignation, and then the tears streamed over her lovely cheeks; and
+even a Pomander might have forborne to torture her so; but Sir Charles
+had no mercy.
+
+“You would be sure to learn it,” said he; “and with malicious additions.
+It is better to hear the truth from a friend.”
+
+“A friend? He is no friend to a house who calumniates the husband to the
+wife. Is it the part of a friend to distort dear Ernest's kindliness and
+gayety into ill morals; to pervert his love of poetry and plays into an
+unworthy attachment to actors and--oh!” and the tears would come. But
+she dried them, for now she hated this man; with all the little power
+of hatred she had, she detested him. “Do you suppose I did not know Mrs.
+Woffington was to come to us to-day?” cried she, struggling passionately
+against her own fears and Sir Charles's innuendoes.
+
+“What!” cried he; “you recognized her? You detected the actress of all
+work under the airs of Lady Betty Modish?”
+
+“Lady Betty Modish!” cried Mabel. “That good, beautiful face!”
+
+“Ah!” cried Sir Charles, “I see you did not. Well, Lady Betty was Mrs.
+Woffington!”
+
+“Whom my husband, I know, had invited here to present her with these
+verses, which I shall take him for her;” and her poor little lip
+trembled. “Had the visit been in any other character, as you are so
+base, so cruel as to insinuate (what have I done to you that you kill me
+so, you wicked gentleman?), would he have chosen the day of my arrival?”
+
+“Not if he knew you were coming,” was the cool reply.
+
+“And he did know--I wrote to him.”
+
+“Indeed!” said Pomander, fairly puzzled.
+
+Mrs. Vane caught sight of her handwriting on the tray, and darted to it,
+and seized her letter, and said, triumphantly:
+
+“My last letter, written upon the road--see!”
+
+Sir Charles took it with surprise, but, turning it in his hand, a cool,
+satirical smile came to his face. He handed it back, and said, coldly:
+
+“Read me the passage, madam, on which you argue.”
+
+Poor Mrs. Vane turned the letter in her hand, and her eye became
+instantly glazed; the seal was unbroken! She gave a sharp cry of agony,
+like a wounded deer. She saw Pomander no longer; she was alone with her
+great anguish. “I had but my husband and my God in the world,” cried
+she. “My mother is gone. My God, have pity on me! my husband does not
+love me.”
+
+The cold villain was startled at the mighty storm his mean hand had
+raised. This creature had not only more feeling, but more passion, than
+a hundred libertines. He muttered some villain's commonplaces; while
+this unhappy young lady raised her hands to heaven, and sobbed in a way
+very terrible to any manly heart.
+
+“He is unworthy you,” muttered Pomander. “He has forfeited your love. He
+has left you nothing but revenge. Be comforted. Let me, who have learned
+already to adore you--”
+
+“So,” cried she, turning on him in a moment (for, on some points,
+woman's instinct is the lightning of wisdom), “this, sir, was your
+object? I may no longer hold a place in my husband's heart; but I am
+mistress of his house. Leave it, sir! and never return to it while I
+live.”
+
+Sir Charles, again discomfited, bowed reverentially. “Your wish shall
+ever be respected by me, madam! But here they come. Use the right of a
+wife. Conceal yourself in that high chair. See, I turn it; so that they
+cannot see you. At least you will find I have but told you the truth.”
+
+“No!” cried Mabel, violently. “I will not spy upon my husband at the
+dictation of his treacherous friend.”
+
+Sir Charles vanished. He was no sooner gone than Mrs. Vane crouched,
+trembling, and writhing with jealousy, in the large, high-backed chair.
+She heard her husband and the _soi-disant_ Lady Betty Modish enter.
+During their absence, Mrs. Woffington had doubtless been playing her
+cards with art; for it appeared that a reconciliation was now taking
+place. The lady, however, was still cool and distant. It was poor
+Mabel's fate to hear these words: “You must permit me to go alone, Mr.
+Vane. I insist upon leaving this house alone.”
+
+On this, he whispered to her.
+
+She answered: “You are not justified.”
+
+“I can explain all,” was his reply. “I am ready to renounce credit,
+character, all the world for you.”
+
+They passed out of the room before the unhappy listener could recover
+the numbing influence of these deadly words.
+
+But the next moment she started wildly up, and cried as one drowning
+cries vaguely for help: “Ernest! oh, no--no! you cannot use me so!
+Ernest--husband! Oh, mother! mother!”
+
+She rose, and would have made for the door, but nature had been too
+cruelly tried. At the first step she could no longer see anything; and
+the next moment, swooning dead away, she fell back insensible, with her
+head and shoulders resting on the chair.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+MR. VANE was putting Mrs. Woffington into her chair, when he thought he
+heard his name cried. He bade that lady a mournful farewell, and stepped
+back into his own hall. He had no sooner done so than he heard a voice,
+the accent of which alarmed him, though he distinguished no word. He
+hastily crossed the hall and flew into the banquet-room. Coming rapidly
+in at the folding-doors he almost fell over his wife, lying insensible
+half upon the floor and half upon the chair. When he saw her pale and
+motionless, a terrible misgiving seized him; he fell on his knees.
+
+“Mabel, Mabel!” cried he, “my love! my innocent wife! Oh, God! what have
+I done? Perhaps it is the fatigue--perhaps she has fainted.”
+
+“No, it is not the fatigue!” screamed a voice near him. It was old James
+Burdock, who, with his white hair streaming and his eye gleaming with
+fire, shook his fist in his master's face--“no, it is not the fatigue,
+you villain! It is you who have killed her, with your jezebels and
+harlots, you scoundrel!”
+
+“Send the women here, James, for God's sake!” cried Mr. Vane, not
+even noticing the insult he had received from a servant. He stamped
+furiously, and cried for help. The whole household was round her in a
+moment. They carried her to bed.
+
+The remorse-stricken man, his own knees trembling under him, flew, in an
+agony of fear and self-reproach, for a doctor!
+
+_A doctor?_
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+DURING the garden scene, Mr. Vane had begged Mrs. Woffington to let him
+accompany her. She peremptorily refused, and said in the same breath
+she was going to Triplet, in Hercules Buildings, to have her portrait
+finished.
+
+Had Mr. Vane understood the sex, he would not have interpreted her
+refusal to the letter; when there was a postscript, the meaning of which
+was so little enigmatical.
+
+Some three hours after the scene we have described, Mrs. Woffington sat
+in Triplet's apartment; and Triplet, palette in hand, painted away upon
+her portrait.
+
+Mrs. Woffington was in that languid state which comes to women after
+their hearts have received a blow. She felt as if life was ended, and
+but the dregs of existence remained; but at times a flood of bitterness
+rolled over her, and she resigned all hope of perfect happiness in this
+world--all hope of loving and respecting the same creature; and at these
+moments she had but one idea--to use her own power, and bind her lover
+to her by chains never to be broken; and to close her eyes, and glide
+down the precipice of the future.
+
+“I think you are master of this art,” said she, very languidly, to
+Triplet, “you paint so rapidly.”
+
+“Yes, madam,” said Triplet, gloomily; and painted on. “Confound this
+shadow!” added he; and painted on.
+
+His soul, too, was clouded. Mrs. Woffington, yawning in his face, had
+told him she had invited all Mr. Vane's company to come and praise his
+work; and ever since that he had been _morne et silencieux._
+
+“You are fortunate,” continued Mrs. Woffington, not caring what she
+said; “it is so difficult to make execution keep pace with conception.”
+
+“Yes, ma'am;” and he painted on.
+
+“You are satisfied with it?”
+
+“Anything but, ma'am;” and he painted on.
+
+“Cheerful soul!--then I presume it is like?”
+
+“Not a bit, ma'am;” and he painted on.
+
+Mrs. Woffington stretched.
+
+“You can't yawn, ma'am--you can't yawn.”
+
+“Oh, yes, I can. You are such good company;” and she stretched again.
+
+“I was just about to catch the turn of the lip,” remonstrated Triplet.
+
+“Well, catch it--it won't run away.”
+
+“I'll try, ma'am. A pleasant half-hour it will be for me, when they all
+come here like cits at a shilling ordinary--each for his cut.”
+
+“At a sensitive goose!”
+
+“That is as may be, madam. Those critics flay us alive!”
+
+“You should not hold so many doors open to censure.”
+
+“No, ma'am. Head a little more that way. I suppose you _can't_ sit
+quiet, ma'am?--then never mind!” (This resignation was intended as a
+stinging reproach.) “Mr. Cibber, with his sneering snuff-box! Mr. Quin,
+with his humorous bludgeon! Mrs. Clive, with her tongue! Mr. Snarl, with
+his abuse! And Mr. Soaper, with his praise!--arsenic in treacle I call
+it! But there, I deserve it all! For look on this picture, and on this!”
+
+“Meaning, I am painted as well as my picture!”
+
+“Oh, no, no, no! But to turn from your face, madam--on which the
+lightning of expression plays, continually--to this stony, detestable,
+dead daub!--I could--And I will, too! Imposture! dead caricature of
+life and beauty, take that!” and he dashed his palette-knife through the
+canvas. “Libelous lie against nature and Mrs. Woffington, take that!”
+ and he stabbed the canvas again; then, with sudden humility: “I beg your
+pardon, ma'am,” said he, “for this apparent outrage, which I trust you
+will set down to the excitement attendant upon failure. The fact is, I
+am an incapable ass, and no painter! Others have often hinted as much;
+but I never observed it myself till now!”
+
+“Right through my pet dimple!” said Mrs. Woffington, with perfect
+_nonchalance._ “Well, now I suppose I may yawn, or do what I like?”
+
+“You may, madam,” said Triplet, gravely. “I have forfeited what little
+control I had over you, madam.”
+
+So they sat opposite each other, in mournful silence. At length the
+actress suddenly rose. She struggled fiercely against her depression,
+and vowed that melancholy should not benumb her spirits and her power.
+
+“He ought to have been here by this time,” said she to herself. “Well, I
+will not mope for him. I must do something. Triplet,” said she.
+
+“Madam.”
+
+“Nothing.”
+
+“No, madam.”
+
+She sat gently down again, and leaned her head on her hand, and thought.
+She was beautiful as she thought!--her body seemed bristling with
+mind! At last, her thoughtful gravity was illumined by a smile. She had
+thought out something _excogitaverat._
+
+“Triplet, the picture is quite ruined!”
+
+“Yes, madam. And a coach-load of criticism coming!”
+
+“Triplet, we actors and actresses have often bright ideas.”
+
+“Yes, ma am.”
+
+“When we take other people's!”
+
+“He, he!” went Triplet. “Those are our best, madam!”
+
+“Well, sir, I have got a bright idea.”
+
+“You don't say so, ma'am!”
+
+“Don't be a brute, dear!” said the lady gravely.
+
+Triplet stared!
+
+“When I was in France, taking lessons of Dumesnil, one of the actors of
+the Theatre Francais had his portrait painted by a rising artist. The
+others were to come and see it. They determined, beforehand, to mortify
+the painter and the sitter, by abusing the work in good set terms. But
+somehow this got wind, and the patients resolved to be the physicians.
+They put their heads together, and contrived that the living face should
+be in the canvas, surrounded by the accessories; these, of course, were
+painted. Enter the actors, who played their little prearranged farce;
+and, when they had each given the picture a slap, the picture rose and
+laughed in their faces, and discomfited them! By the by, the painter
+did not stop there; he was not content with a short laugh, he laughed at
+them five hundred years!”
+
+“Good gracious, Mrs. Woffington!”
+
+“He painted a picture of the whole thing; and as his work is immortal,
+ours an April snow-flake, he has got tremendously the better of those
+rash little satirists. Well, Trip, what is sauce for the gander is sauce
+for the goose; so give me the sharpest knife in the house.”
+
+Triplet gave her a knife, and looked confused, while she cut away the
+face of the picture, and by dint of scraping, cutting, and measuring,
+got her face two parts through the canvas. She then made him take his
+brush and paint all round her face, so that the transition might not be
+too abrupt. Several yards of green baize were also produced. This was to
+be disposed behind the easel, so as to conceal her.
+
+Triplet painted here, and touched and retouched there. While thus
+occupied, he said, in his calm, resigned way: “It won't do, madam. I
+suppose you know that?”
+
+“I know nothing,” was the reply: “life is a guess. I don't think we
+could deceive Roxalana and Lucy this way, because their eyes are
+without colored spectacles; but, when people have once begun to see by
+prejudices and judge by jargon what can't be done with them? Who knows?
+do you? I don't; so let us try.”
+
+“I beg your pardon, madam; my brush touched your face.”
+
+“No offense, sir; I am used to that. And I beg, if you can't tone the
+rest of the picture up to me, that you will instantly tone me down to
+the rest. Let us be in tune, whatever it costs, sir.”
+
+“I will avail myself of the privilege, madam, but sparingly. Failure,
+which is certain, madam, will cover us with disgrace.”
+
+“Nothing is certain in this life, sir, except that you are a goose.
+It succeeded in France; and England can match all Europe for fools.
+Besides, it will be well done. They say Davy Garrick can turn his eyes
+into bottled gooseberries. Well, Peg Woffington will turn hers into
+black currants. Haven't you done? I wonder they have not come. Make
+haste!”
+
+“They will know by its beauty I never did it.”
+
+“That is a sensible remark, Trip. But I think they will rather argue
+backward; that, as you did it, it cannot be beautiful, and so cannot be
+me. Your reputation will be our shield.”
+
+“Well, madam, now you mention it, they are like enough to take that
+ground. They despise all I do; if they did not--”
+
+“You would despise them.”
+
+At this moment the pair were startled by the sound of a coach. Triplet
+turned as pale as ashes. Mrs. Woffington had her misgivings; but, not
+choosing to increase the difficulty, she would not let Triplet, whose
+self-possession she doubted, see any sign of emotion in her.
+
+“Lock the door,” said she, firmly, “and don't be silly. Now hold up my
+green baize petticoat, and let me be in a half-light. Now put that table
+and those chairs before me, so that they can't come right up to me; and,
+Triplet, don't let them come within six yards, if you can help it. Say
+it is unfinished, and so must be seen from a focus.”
+
+“A focus! I don't know what you mean.”
+
+“No more do I; no more will they, perhaps; and if they don't they will
+swallow it directly. Unlock the door. Are they coming?”
+
+“They are only at the first stair.”
+
+“Mr. Triplet, your face is a book, where one may read strange matters.
+For Heaven's sake, compose yourself. Let all the risk lie in one
+countenance. Look at me, sir. Make your face like the Book of Daniel in
+a Jew's back parlor. Volto Sciolto is your cue.”
+
+“Madam, madam, how your tongue goes! I hear them on the stairs. Pray
+don't speak!”
+
+“Do you know what we are going to do?” continued the tormenting Peggy.
+“We are going to weigh goose's feathers! to criticise criticism, Trip--”
+
+“Hush! hush!”
+
+A grampus was heard outside the door, and Triplet opened it. There was
+Quin leading the band.
+
+“Have a care, sir,” cried Triplet; “there is a hiatus the third step
+from the door.”
+
+“A _gradus ad Parnassum_ a wanting,” said Mr. Cibber.
+
+Triplet's heart sank. The hole had been there six months, and he had
+found nothing witty to say about it, and at first sight Mr. Cibber had
+done its business. And on such men he and his portrait were to attempt
+a preposterous delusion. Then there was Snarl, who wrote critiques on
+painting, and guided the national taste. The unlucky exhibitor was in a
+cold sweat. He led the way, like a thief going to the gallows.
+
+“The picture being unfinished, gentlemen,” said he, “must, if you would
+do me justice, be seen from a--a focus; must be judged from here, I
+mean.”
+
+“Where, sir?” said Mr. Cibber.
+
+“About here, sir, if you please,” said poor Triplet faintly.
+
+“It looks like a finished picture from here,” said Mrs. Clive.
+
+“Yes, madam,” groaned Triplet.
+
+They all took up a position, and Triplet timidly raised his eyes along
+with the rest. He was a little surprised. The actress had flattened
+her face! She had done all that could be done, and more than he had
+conceived possible, in the way of extracting life and the atmosphere of
+expression from her countenance. She was “dead still!”
+
+There was a pause. Triplet fluttered. At last some of them spoke as
+follows:
+
+_Soaper._ “Ah!”
+
+_Quin._ “Ho!”
+
+_Clive._ “Eh!”
+
+_Cibber._ “Humph!”
+
+These interjections are small on paper, but as the good creatures
+uttered them they were eloquent; there was a cheerful variety of
+dispraise skillfully thrown into each of them.
+
+“Well,” continued Soaper, with his everlasting smile.
+
+Then the fun began.
+
+“May I be permitted to ask whose portrait this is?” said Mr. Cibber
+slyly.
+
+“I distinctly told you, it was to be Peg Woffington's,” said Mrs. Clive.
+“I think you might take my word.”
+
+“Do you act as truly as you paint?” said Quin.
+
+“Your fame runs no risk from me, sir!” replied Triplet.
+
+“It is not like Peggy's beauty! Eh?” rejoined Quin.
+
+“I can't agree with you,” cried Kitty Clive. “I think it a very pretty
+face; and not at all like Peg Woffington's.”
+
+“Compare paint with paint,” said Quin. “Are you sure you ever saw down
+to Peggy's real face?”
+
+Triplet had seen with alarm that Mr. Snarl spoke not; many satirical
+expressions crossed his face, but he said nothing. Triplet gathered from
+this that he had at once detected the trick. “Ah!” thought Triplet, “he
+means to quiz them, as well as expose me. He is hanging back; and, in
+point of fact, a mighty satirist like Snarl would naturally choose to
+quiz six people rather than two.”
+
+“Now I call it beautiful!” said the traitor Soaper. “So calm and
+reposeful; no particular expression.”
+
+“None whatever,” said Snarl.
+
+“Gentlemen,” said Triplet, “does it never occur to you that the fine
+arts are tender violets, and cannot blow when the north winds--”
+
+“Blow!” inserted Quin.
+
+“Are so cursed cutting?” continued Triplet.
+
+“My good sir, I am never cutting!” smirked Soaper. “My dear Snarl,”
+ whined he, “give us the benefit of your practiced judgment. Do justice
+to this ad-mirable work of art,” drawled the traitor.
+
+“I will!” said Mr. Snarl; and placed himself before the picture.
+
+“What on earth will he say?” thought Triplet. “I can see by his face he
+has found us out.”
+
+Mr. Snarl delivered a short critique. Mr. Snarl's intelligence was
+not confined to his phrases; all critics use intelligent phrases and
+philosophical truths. But this gentleman's manner was very intelligent;
+it was pleasant, quiet, assured, and very convincing. Had the reader or
+I been there, he would have carried us with him, as he did his hearers;
+and as his successors carry the public with them now.
+
+“Your brush is by no means destitute of talent, Mr. Triplet,” said
+Mr. Snarl. “But you are somewhat deficient, at present, in the great
+principles of your art; the first of which is a loyal adherence to
+truth. Beauty itself is but one of the forms of truth, and nature is our
+finite exponent of infinite truth.”
+
+His auditors gave him a marked attention. They could not but acknowledge
+that men who go to the bottom of things like this should be the best
+instructors.
+
+“Now, in nature, a woman's face at this distance--ay, even at this short
+distance--melts into the air. There is none of that sharpness; but, on
+the contrary, a softness of outline.” He made a lorgnette of his two
+hands; the others did so too, and found they saw much better--oh, ever
+so much better! “Whereas yours,” resumed Snarl, “is hard; and, forgive
+me, rather tea-board like. Then your _chiaro scuro,_ my good sir, is
+very defective; for instance, in nature, the nose, intercepting the
+light on one side the face, throws, of necessity, a shadow under the
+eye. Caravaggio, Venetians generally, and the Bolognese masters, do
+particular justice to this. No such shade appears in this portrait.”
+
+“'Tis so, stop my vitals!” observed Colley Cibber. And they all looked,
+and, having looked, wagged their heads in assent--as the fat, white
+lords at Christie's waggle fifty pounds more out for a copy of
+Rembrandt, a brown levitical Dutchman, visible in the pitch-dark by some
+sleight of sun Newton had not wit to discover.
+
+Soaper dissented from the mass.
+
+“But, my dear Snarl, if there are no shades, there are lights, loads of
+lights.”
+
+“There are,” replied Snarl; “only they are impossible, that is all.
+You have, however,” concluded he, with a manner slightly supercilious,
+“succeeded in the mechanical parts; the hair and the dress are well, Mr.
+Triplet; but your Woffington is not a woman, not nature.”
+
+They all nodded and waggled assent; but this sagacious motion was
+arrested as by an earthquake.
+
+The picture rang out, in the voice of a clarion, an answer that outlived
+the speaker: “She's a woman! for she has taken four men in! She's
+nature! for a fluent dunce doesn't know her when he sees her!”
+
+Imagine the tableau! It was charming! Such opening of eyes and mouths!
+Cibber fell by second nature into an attitude of the old comedy. And all
+were rooted where they stood, with surprise and incipient mortification,
+except Quin, who slapped his knee, and took the trick at its value.
+
+Peg Woffington slipped out of the green baize, and, coming round from
+the back of the late picture, stood in person before them; while they
+looked alternately at her and at the hole in the canvas. She then came
+at each of them in turn, _more dramatico._
+
+“A pretty face, and not like Woffington. I owe you two, Kate Clive.”
+
+“Who ever saw Peggy's real face? Look at it now if you can without
+blushing, Mr. Quin.”
+
+Quin, a good-humored fellow, took the wisest view of his predicament,
+and burst into a hearty laugh.
+
+“For all this,” said Mr. Snarl, peevishly, “I maintain, upon the
+unalterable principles of art--” At this they all burst into a roar,
+not sorry to shift the ridicule. “Goths!” cried Snarl, fiercely.
+“Good-morning, ladies and gentlemen,” cried Mr. Snarl, _avec intention,_
+“I have a criticism to write of last night's performance.” The laugh
+died away to a quaver. “I shall sit on your pictures one day, Mr.
+Brush.”
+
+“Don't sit on them with your head downward, or you'll addle them,” said
+Mr. Brush, fiercely. This was the first time Triplet had ever answered
+a foe. Mrs. Woffington gave him an eloquent glance of encouragement. He
+nodded his head in infantine exultation at what he had done.
+
+“Come, Soaper,” said Mr. Snarl.
+
+Mr. Soaper lingered one moment to say: “You shall always have my good
+word, Mr. Triplet.”
+
+“I will try--and not deserve it, Mr. Soaper,” was the prompt reply.
+
+“Serve 'em right,” said Mr. Cibber, as soon as the door had closed upon
+them; “for a couple of serpents, or rather one boa-constrictor. Soaper
+slavers, for Snarl to crush. But we were all a little too hard on
+Triplet here; and, if he will accept my apology--”
+
+“Why, sir,” said Triplet, half trembling, but driven on by looks from
+Mrs. Woffington, “'Cibber's Apology' is found to be a trifle wearisome.”
+
+“Confound his impertinence!” cried the astounded laureate. “Come along,
+Jemmy.”
+
+“Oh, sir,” said Quin, good-humoredly, “we must give a joke and take a
+joke. And when he paints my portrait--which he shall do--”
+
+“The bear from Hockley Hole shall sit for the head!”
+
+“Curse his impudence!” roared Quin. “I'm at your service, Mr. Cibber,”
+ added he, in huge dudgeon.
+
+Away went the two old boys.
+
+“Mighty well!” said waspish Mrs. Clive. “I did intend you should have
+painted Mrs. Clive. But after this impertinence--”
+
+“You will continue to do it yourself, ma'am!”
+
+This was Triplet's hour of triumph. His exultation was undignified,
+and such as is said to precede a fall. He inquired gravely of Mrs.
+Woffington, whether he had or had not shown a spirit. Whether he had or
+had not fired into each a parting shot, as they sheered off. To repair
+which, it might be advisable for them to put into friendly ports.
+
+“Tremendous!” was the reply. “And when Snarl and Soaper sit on your next
+play, they won't forget the lesson you have given them.”
+
+“I'll be sworn they won't!” chuckled Triplet. But, reconsidering her
+words, he looked blank, and muttered: “Then perhaps it would have been
+more prudent to let them alone!”
+
+“Incalculably more prudent!” was the reply.
+
+“Then why did you set me on, madam?” said Triplet, reproachfully.
+
+“Because I wanted amusement, and my head ached,” was the cool answer,
+somewhat languidly given.
+
+“I defy the coxcombs!” cried Triplet, with reviving spirit. “But real
+criticism I respect, honor, and bow to. Such as yours, madam; or such as
+that sweet lady's at Mr. Vane's would have been; or, in fact, anybody's
+who appreciates me. Oh, madam, I wanted to ask you, was it not strange
+your not being at Mr. Vane's, after all, to-day?”
+
+“I was at Mr. Vane's, Triplet.”
+
+“You were? Why, I came with my verses, and she said you were not there!
+I will go fetch the verses.”
+
+“No, no! Who said I was not there?”
+
+“Did I not tell you? The charming young lady who helped me with her own
+hand to everything on the table. What wine that gentleman possesses!”
+
+“Was it a young lady, Triplet?”
+
+“Not more than two-and-twenty, I should say.
+
+“In a traveling-dress?”
+
+“I could not see her dress, madam, for her beauty--brown hair, blue
+eyes, charming in conversation--”
+
+“Ah! What did she tell you?”
+
+“She told me, madam--Ahem!”
+
+“Well, what did you tell her? And what did she answer?”
+
+“I told her that I came with verses for you, ordered by Mr. Vane. That
+he admired you. I descanted, madam, on your virtues, which had made him
+your slave.”
+
+“Go on,” said Mrs. Woffington, encouraging him with a deceitful smile.
+“Tell me all you told her.”
+
+“That you were sitting to me for your portrait, the destination of which
+was not doubtful. That I lived at 10, Hercules Buildings.”
+
+“You told that lady all this?”
+
+“I give my honor. She was so kind, I opened my heart to her. But tell
+me now, madam,” said Triplet, joyously dancing round the Woffington
+volcano, “do you know this charming lady?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“I congratulate you, madam. An acquaintance worthy even of you; and
+there are not many such. Who is she, madam?” continued Triplet, lively
+with curiosity.
+
+“Mrs. Vane,” was the quiet, grim answer.
+
+“Mrs. Vane? His mother? No--am I mad? His sister! Oh, I see, his--”
+
+“His wife!”
+
+“His wife! Why, then, Mr. Vane's married?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Oh, look there!--Oh, look here now! Well, but, good Heavens! she wasn't
+to know you were there, perhaps?”
+
+“No.”
+
+“But then I let the cat out of the bag?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“But, good gracious! there will be some serious mischief!”
+
+“No doubt of it.”
+
+“And it is all my fault?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“I've played the deuce with their married happiness?”
+
+“Probably.”
+
+“And ten to one if you are not incensed against me too?”
+
+Mrs. Woffington replied by looking him in the face, and turning her back
+upon him. She walked hastily to the window, threw it open, and looked
+out of it, leaving poor Triplet to very unpleasant reflections. She was
+so angry with him she dared not trust herself to speak.
+
+“Just my luck,” thought he. “I had a patron and a benefactress; I have
+betrayed them both.” Suddenly an idea struck him. “Madam,” said he,
+timorously, “see what these fine gentlemen are! What business had he,
+with a wife at home, to come and fall in love with you? I do it forever
+in my plays--I am obliged--they would be so dull else; but in _real_
+life to do it is abominable.”
+
+“You forget, sir,” replied Mrs. Woffington, without moving, “that I
+am an actress--a plaything for the impertinence of puppies and the
+treachery of hypocrites. Fool! to think there was an honest man in the
+world, and that he had shone on me!”
+
+With these words she turned, and Triplet was shocked to see the change
+in her face. She was pale, and her black, lowering brows were gloomy and
+terrible. She walked like a tigress to and fro, and Triplet dared not
+speak to her. Indeed she seemed but half conscious of his presence. He
+went for nobody with her. How little we know the people we eat and go to
+church and flirt with! Triplet had imagined this creature an incarnation
+of gayety, a sportive being, the daughter of smiles, the bride of mirth;
+needed but a look at her now to see that her heart was a volcano, her
+bosom a boiling gulf of fiery lava. She walked like some wild creature;
+she flung her hands up to heaven with a passionate despair, before
+which the feeble spirit of her companion shrank and cowered; and, with
+quivering lips and blazing eyes, she burst into a torrent of passionate
+bitterness.
+
+“But who is Margaret Woffington,” she cried, “that she should pretend
+to honest love, or feel insulted by the proffer of a stolen regard? And
+what have we to do with homes, or hearts, or firesides? Have we not the
+playhouse, its paste diamonds, its paste feelings, and the loud applause
+of fops and sots--hearts?--beneath loads of tinsel and paint? Nonsense!
+The love that can go with souls to heaven--such love for us? Nonsense!
+These men applaud us, cajole us, swear to us, flatter us; and yet,
+forsooth, we would have them respect us too.”
+
+“My dear benefactress,” said Triplet, “they are not worthy of you.”
+
+“I thought this man was not all dross; from the first I never felt his
+passion an insult. Oh, Triplet! I could have loved this man--really
+loved him! and I longed so to be good. Oh, God! oh, God!”
+
+“Thank Heaven, you don't love him!” cried Triplet, hastily. “Thank
+Heaven for that!”
+
+“Love him? Love a man who comes to me with a silly second-hand affection
+from his insipid baby-face, and offers me half, or two-thirds, or a
+third of his worthless heart? I hate him! and her! and all the world!”
+
+“That is what I call a very proper feeling,” said poor Triplet, with a
+weak attempt to soothe her. “Then break with him at once, and all will
+be well.”
+
+“Break with him? Are you mad? No! Since he plays with the tools of my
+trade I shall fool him worse than he has me. I will feed his passion
+full, tempt him, torture him, play with him, as the angler plays a fish
+upon his hook. And, when his very life depends on me, then by degrees
+he shall see me cool, and cool, and freeze into bitter aversion. Then he
+shall rue the hour he fought with the Devil against my soul, and played
+false with a brain and heart like mine!”
+
+“But his poor wife? You will have pity on her?”
+
+“His wife! Are wives' hearts the only hearts that throb, and burn, and
+break? His wife must defend herself. It is not from me that mercy can
+come to her, nor from her to me. I loathe her, and I shall not forget
+that you took her part. Only, if you are her friend, take my advice,
+don't you assist her. I shall defeat her without that. Let her fight
+_her_ battle, and _I_ mine.
+
+“Ah, madam! she cannot fight; she is a dove.”
+
+“You are a fool! What do you know about women? You were with her five
+minutes, and she turned you inside out. My life on it, while I have been
+fooling my time here, she is in the field, with all the arts of our sex,
+simplicity at the head of them.”
+
+Triplet was making a futile endeavor to convert her to his view of her
+rival, when a knock suddenly came to his door. A slovenly girl, one of
+his own neighbors, brought him a bit of paper, with a line written in
+pencil.
+
+“'Tis from a lady, who waits below,” said the girl.
+
+Mrs. Woffington went again to the window, and there she saw getting out
+of a coach, and attended by James Burdock, Mabel Vane, who had sent up
+her name on the back of an old letter.
+
+“What shall I do?” said Triplet, as soon as he recovered the first
+stunning effects of this _contretemps._ To his astonishment, Mrs.
+Woffington bade the girl show the lady upstairs. The girl went down on
+this errand.
+
+“But _you_ are here,” remonstrated Triplet. “Oh, to be sure, you can
+go into the other room. There is plenty of time to avoid her,” said
+Triplet, in a very natural tremor. “This way, madam!”
+
+Mrs. Woffington stood in the middle of the room like a statue.
+
+“What does she come here for?” said she, sternly. “You have not told me
+all.”
+
+“I don't know,” cried poor Triplet, in dismay; “and I think the Devil
+brings her here to confound me. For Heaven's sake, retire! What will
+become of us all? There will be murder, I know there will!”
+
+To his horror, Mrs. Woffington would not move. “You are on her side,”
+ said she slowly, with a concentration of spite and suspicion. She looked
+frightful at this moment. “All the better for me,” added she, with a
+world of female malignity.
+
+Triplet could not make head against this blow; he gasped, and pointed
+piteously to the inner door. “No; I will know two things: the course she
+means to take, and the terms you two are upon.”
+
+By this time Mrs. Vane's light foot was heard on the stair, and Triplet
+sank into a chair. “They will tear one another to pieces,” said he.
+
+A tap came to the door.
+
+He looked fearfully round for the woman whom jealousy had so speedily
+turned from an angel to a fiend; and saw with dismay that she had
+actually had the hardihood to slip round and enter the picture again.
+She had not quite arranged herself when her rival knocked.
+
+Triplet dragged himself to the door. Before he opened it, he looked
+fearfully over his shoulder, and received a glance of cool, bitter,
+deadly hostility, that boded ill both for him and his visitor. Triplet's
+apprehensions were not unreasonable. His benefactress and this sweet
+lady were rivals!
+
+Jealousy is a dreadful passion, it makes us tigers. The jealous always
+thirst for blood. At any moment when reason is a little weaker than
+usual, they are ready to kill the thing they hate, or the thing they
+love.
+
+Any open collision between these ladies would scatter ill consequences
+all round. Under such circumstances, we are pretty sure to say or do
+something wicked, silly, or unreasonable. But what tortured Triplet
+more than anything was his own particular notion that fate doomed him
+to witness a formal encounter between these two women, and of course
+an encounter of such a nature as we in our day illustrate by “Kilkenny
+cats.”
+
+To be sure Mrs. Vane had appeared a dove, but doves can peck on certain
+occasions, and no doubt she had a spirit at bottom. Her coming to
+him proved it. And had not the other been a dove all the morning and
+afternoon? Yet, jealousy had turned her to a fiend before his eyes. Then
+if (which was not probable) no collision took place, what a situation
+was his! Mrs. Woffington (his buckler from starvation) suspected him,
+and would distort every word that came from Mrs. Vane's lips.
+
+Triplet's situation was, in fact, that of AEneas in the storm.
+
+“Olim et haec meminisse juvabit--” “But, while present, such things
+don't please any one a bit.”
+
+It was the sort of situation we can laugh at, and see the fun of it six
+months after, if not shipwrecked on it at the time.
+
+With a ghastly smile the poor quaking hypocrite welcomed Mrs. Vane, and
+professed a world of innocent delight that she had so honored his humble
+roof.
+
+She interrupted his compliments, and begged him to see whether she was
+followed by a gentleman in a cloak.
+
+Triplet looked out of the window.
+
+“Sir Charles Pomander!” gasped he.
+
+Sir Charles was at the very door. If, however, he had intended to mount
+the stairs he changed his mind, for he suddenly went off round the
+corner with a businesslike air, real or fictitious.
+
+“He is gone, madam,” said Triplet.
+
+Mrs. Vane, the better to escape detection or observation, wore a
+thick mantle and a hood that concealed her features. Of these Triplet
+debarrassed her.
+
+“Sit down, madam;” and he hastily drew a chair so that her back was to
+the picture.
+
+She was pale, and trembled a little. She hid her face in her hands a
+moment, then, recovering her courage, “she begged Mr. Triplet to pardon
+her for coming to him. He had inspired her with confidence,” she said;
+“he had offered her his services, and so she had come to him, for she
+had no other friend to aid her in her sore distress.” She might have
+added, that with the tact of her sex she had read Triplet to the bottom,
+and came to him, as she would to a benevolent, muscular old woman.
+
+Triplet's natural impulse was to repeat most warmly his offers of
+service. He did so; and then, conscious of the picture, had a misgiving.
+
+“Dear Mr. Triplet,” began Mrs. Vane, “you know this person, Mrs.
+Woffington?”
+
+“Yes, madam,” replied Triplet, lowering his eyes, “I am honored by her
+acquaintance.”
+
+“You will take me to the theater where she acts?”
+
+“Yes, madam; to the boxes, I presume?”
+
+“No! oh, no! How could I bear that? To the place where the actors and
+actresses are.”
+
+Triplet demurred. This would be courting that very collision, the dread
+of which even now oppressed him.
+
+At the first faint sign of resistance she began to supplicate him, as if
+he was some great, stern tyrant.
+
+“Oh, you must not, you cannot refuse me. You do not know what I risk
+to obtain this. I have risen from my bed to come to you. I have a fire
+here!” She pressed her hand to her brow. “Oh, take me to her!”
+
+“Madam, I will do anything for you. But be advised; trust to my
+knowledge of human nature. What you require is madness. Gracious
+Heavens! you two are rivals, and when rivals meet there's murder or
+deadly mischief.”
+
+“Ah! if you knew my sorrow, you would not thwart me. Oh, Mr. Triplet!
+little did I think you were as cruel as the rest.” So then this cruel
+monster whimpered out that he should do any folly she insisted upon.
+“Good, kind Mr. Triplet!” said Mrs. Vane. “Let me look in your face?
+Yes, I see you are honest and true. I will tell you all.” Then she
+poured in his ear her simple tale, unadorned and touching as Judah's
+speech to Joseph. She told him how she loved her husband; how he had
+loved her; how happy they were for the first six months; how her heart
+sank when he left her; how he had promised she should join him, and on
+that hope she lived. “But for two months he had ceased to speak of this,
+and I grew heart-sick waiting for the summons that never came. At last
+I felt I should die if I did not see him; so I plucked up courage and
+wrote that I must come to him. He did not forbid me, so I left our
+country home. Oh, sir! I cannot make you know how my heart burned to be
+by his side. I counted the hours of the journey; I counted the miles.
+At last I reached his house; I found a gay company there. I was a little
+sorry, but I said: 'His friends shall be welcome, right welcome. He has
+asked them to welcome his wife.'”
+
+“Poor thing!” muttered Triplet.
+
+“Oh, Mr. Triplet! they were there to do honor to ----, and the wife
+was neither expected nor desired. There lay my letters with their seals
+unbroken. I know all _his_ letters by heart, Mr. Triplet. The seals
+unbroken--unbroken! Mr. Triplet.”
+
+“It is abominable!” cried Triplet fiercely. “And she who sat in my
+seat--in his house, and in his heart--was this lady, the actress you so
+praised to me?”
+
+“That lady, ma'am,” said Triplet, “has been deceived as well as you.”
+
+“I am convinced of it,” said Mabel.
+
+“And it is my painful duty to tell you, madam, that, with all her
+talents and sweetness, she has a fiery temper; yes, a very fiery
+temper,” continued Triplet, stoutly, though with an uneasy glance in
+a certain direction; “and I have reason to believe she is angry, and
+thinks more of her own ill-usage than yours. Don't you go near her.
+Trust to my knowledge of the sex, madam; I am a dramatic writer. Did you
+ever read the 'Rival Queens'?”
+
+“No.”
+
+“I thought not. Well, madam, one stabs the other, and the one that is
+stabbed says things to the other that are more biting than steel. The
+prudent course for you is to keep apart, and be always cheerful, and
+welcome him with a smile--and--have you read 'The Way to keep him'?”
+
+“No, Mr. Triplet,” said Mabel, firmly, “I cannot feign. Were I to
+attempt talent and deceit, I should be weaker than I am now. Honesty and
+right are all my strength. I will cry to her for justice and mercy. And
+if I cry in vain, I shall die, Mr. Triplet, that is all.”
+
+“Don't cry, dear lady,” said Triplet, in a broken voice.
+
+“It is impossible!” cried she, suddenly. “I am not learned, but I can
+read faces. I always could, and so could my Aunt Deborah before me. I
+read you right, Mr. Triplet, and I have read her too. Did not my heart
+warm to her among them all? There is a heart at the bottom of all her
+acting, and that heart is good and noble.”
+
+“She is, madam! she is! and charitable too. I know a family she saved
+from starvation and despair. Oh, yes! she has a heart--to feel for the
+_poor,_ at all events.”
+
+“And am I not the poorest of the poor?” cried Mrs. Vane. “I have
+no father nor mother, Mr. Triplet; my husband is all I have in the
+world--all I _had,_ I mean.”
+
+Triplet, deeply affected himself, stole a look at Mrs. Woffington. She
+was pale; but her face was composed into a sort of dogged obstinacy.
+He was disgusted with her. “Madam,” said he, sternly, “there is a wild
+beast more cruel and savage than wolves and bears; it is called 'a
+rival,' and don't you get in its way.”
+
+At this moment, in spite of Triplet's precaution, Mrs. Vane, casting
+her eye accidentally round, caught sight of the picture, and instantly
+started up, crying, “She is there!” Triplet was thunderstruck. “What
+likeness!” cried she, and moved toward the supposed picture.
+
+“Don't go to it!” cried Triplet, aghast; “the color is wet.”
+
+She stopped; but her eye and her very soul dwelt upon the supposed
+picture; and Triplet stood quaking. “How like! It seems to breathe. You
+are a great painter, sir. A glass is not truer.”
+
+Triplet, hardly knowing what he said, muttered something about “critics
+and lights and shades.”
+
+“Then they are blind!” cried Mabel, never for a moment removing her eye
+from the object. “Tell me not of lights and shades. The pictures I see
+have a look of paint; but yours looks like life. Oh, that she were here,
+as this _wonderful_ image of hers is. I would speak to her. I am not
+wise or learned; but orators never pleaded as I would plead to her
+for my Ernest's heart.” Still her eye glanced upon the picture; and I
+suppose her heart realized an actual presence, though her judgment did
+not; for by some irresistible impulse she sank slowly down and stretched
+her clasped hands toward it, while sobs and words seemed to break direct
+from her bursting heart. “Oh, yes! you are beautiful, you are gifted,
+and the eyes of thousands wait upon your very word and look. What wonder
+that he, ardent, refined, and genial, should lay his heart at your feet?
+And I have nothing but my love to make him love me. I cannot take him
+from you. Oh, be generous to the weak! Oh, give him back to me! What is
+one heart more to you? You are so rich, and I am so poor, that without
+his love I have nothing, and can do nothing but sit me down and cry till
+my heart breaks. Give him back to me, beautiful, terrible woman! for,
+with all your gifts, you cannot love him as his poor Mabel does; and I
+will love you longer perhaps than men can love. I will kiss your feet,
+and Heaven above will bless you; and I will bless you and pray for you
+to my dying day. Ah! it is alive! I am frightened! I am frightened!” She
+ran to Triplet and seized his arm. “No!” cried she, quivering close to
+him; “I'm not frightened, for it was for me she--Oh, Mrs. Woffington!”
+ and, hiding her face on Mr. Triplet's shoulder, she blushed, and wept,
+and trembled.
+
+What was it had betrayed Mrs. Woffington? _A tear!_
+
+During the whole of this interview (which had taken a turn so unlooked
+for by the listener) she might have said with Beatrice, “What fire is in
+mine ears?” and what self-reproach and chill misgiving in her heart too.
+She had passed through a hundred emotions, as the young innocent wife
+told her sad and simple story. But, anxious now above all things to
+escape without being recognized--for she had long repented having
+listened at all, or placed herself in her present position--she fiercely
+mastered her countenance; but, though she ruled her features, she could
+not rule her heart. And when the young wife, instead of inveighing
+against her, came to her as a supplicant, with faith in her goodness,
+and sobbed to her for pity, a big tear rolled down her cheek, and proved
+her something more than a picture or an actress.
+
+Mrs. Vane, as we have related, screamed and ran to Triplet.
+
+Mrs. Woffington came instantly from her frame, and stood before them in
+a despairing attitude, with one hand upon her brow. For a single moment
+her impulse was to fly from the apartment, so ashamed was she of having
+listened, and of meeting her rival in this way; but she conquered
+this feeling, and, as soon as she saw Mrs. Vane too had recovered some
+composure, she said to Triplet, in a low but firm voice:
+
+“Leave us, sir. No living creature must hear what I say to this lady!”
+
+Triplet remonstrated, but Mrs. Vane said, faintly:
+
+“Oh, yes, good Mr. Triplet, I would rather you left me.”
+
+Triplet, full of misgivings, was obliged to retire.
+
+“Be composed, ladies,” said he piteously. “Neither of you could help
+it;” and so he entered his inner room, where he sat and listened
+nervously, for he could not shake off all apprehension of a personal
+encounter.
+
+In the room he had left there was a long, uneasy silence. Both ladies
+were greatly embarrassed. It was the actress who spoke first. All trace
+of emotion, except a certain pallor, was driven from her face. She spoke
+with very marked courtesy, but in tones that seemed to freeze as they
+dropped one by one from her mouth.
+
+“I trust, madam, you will do me the justice to believe I did not know
+Mr. Vane was married?”
+
+“I am sure of it!” said Mabel, warmly. “I feel you are as good as you
+are gifted.”
+
+“Mrs. Vane, I am not!” said the other, almost sternly. “You are
+deceived!”
+
+“Then Heaven have mercy on me! No! I am not deceived, you pitied me. You
+speak coldly now; but I know your face and your heart--you pity me!”
+
+“I do respect, admire, and pity you,” said Mrs. Woffington, sadly; “and
+I could consent nevermore to communicate with your--with Mr. Vane.”
+
+“Ah!” cried Mabel; “Heaven will bless you! But will you give me back his
+heart?”
+
+“How can I do that?” said Mrs. Woffington, uneasily; she had not
+bargained for this.
+
+“The magnet can repel as well as attract. Can you not break your own
+spell? What will his presence be to me, if his heart remain behind?”
+
+“You ask much of me.”
+
+“Alas! I do.”
+
+“But I could do even this.” She paused for breath. “And perhaps if you,
+who have not only touched my heart, but won my respect, were to say
+to me, 'Do so,' I should do it.” Again she paused, and spoke with
+difficulty; for the bitter struggle took away her breath. “Mr. Vane
+thinks better of me than I deserve. I have--only--to make him believe
+me--worthless--worse than I am--and he will drop me like an adder--and
+love you better, far better--for having known--admired--and despised
+Margaret Woffington.”
+
+“Oh!” cried Mabel, “I shall bless you every hour of my life.”
+ Her countenance brightened into rapture at the picture, and Mrs.
+Woffington's darkened with bitterness as she watched her.
+
+But Mabel reflected. “Rob you of your good name?” said this pure
+creature. “Ah, Mabel Vane! you think but of yourself.”
+
+“I thank you, madam,” said Mrs. Woffington, a little touched by this
+unexpected trait; “but some one must suffer here, and--”
+
+Mabel Vane interrupted her. “This would be cruel and base,” said she
+firmly. “No woman's forehead shall be soiled by me. Oh, madam! beauty is
+admired, talent is adored; but virtue is a woman's crown. With it, the
+poor are rich; without it, the rich are poor. It walks through life
+upright, and never hides its head for high or low.”
+
+Her face was as the face of an angel now; and the actress, conquered by
+her beauty and her goodness, actually bowed her head and gently kissed
+the hand of the country wife whom she had quizzed a few hours ago.
+
+Frailty paid this homage to virtue!
+
+Mabel Vane hardly noticed it; her eye was lifted to heaven, and her
+heart was gone there for help in a sore struggle.
+
+“This would be to assassinate you; no less. And so, madam,” she sighed,
+“with God's help, I do refuse your offer; choosing rather, if needs be,
+to live desolate, but innocent--many a better than I hath lived so--ay!
+if God wills it, to die, with my hopes and my heart crushed, but my
+hands unstained; for so my humble life has passed.”
+
+How beautiful, great, and pure goodness is! It paints heaven on the face
+that has it; it wakens the sleeping souls that meet it.
+
+At the bottom of Margaret Woffington's heart lay a soul, unknown to the
+world, scarce known to herself--a heavenly harp, on which ill airs of
+passion had been played--but still it was there, in tune with all that
+is true, pure, really great and good. And now the flush that a great
+heart sends to the brow, to herald great actions, came to her cheek and
+brow.
+
+“Humble!” she cried. “Such as you are the diamonds of our race. You
+angel of truth and goodness, you have conquered!”
+
+“Oh, yes! yes! Thank God, yes!”
+
+“What a fiend I must be could I injure you! The poor heart we have both
+overrated shall be yours again, and yours for ever. In my hands it
+is painted glass; in the luster of a love like yours it may become a
+priceless jewel.” She turned her head away and pondered a moment, then
+suddenly offered to Mrs. Vane her hand with nobleness and majesty; “Can
+you trust me?” The actress too was divinely beautiful now, for her good
+angel shone through her.
+
+“I could trust you with my life!” was the reply.
+
+ “Ah! if I might call you friend, dear lady, what would I not
+do--suffer--resign--to be worthy that title!”
+
+“No, not friend!” cried the warm, innocent Mabel; “sister! I will call
+you sister. I have no sister.”
+
+ “Sister!” said Mrs. Woffington. “Oh, do not mock me! Alas! you do not
+know what you say. That sacred name to me, from lips so pure as yours.
+Mrs. Vane,” said she, timidly, “would you think me presumptuous if I
+begged you to--to let me kiss you?”
+
+ The words were scarce spoken before Mrs. Vane's arms were wreathed round
+her neck, and that innocent cheek laid sweetly to hers.
+
+Mrs. Woffington strained her to her bosom, and two great hearts, whose
+grandeur the world, worshiper of charlatans, never discovered, had found
+each other out and beat against each other. A great heart is as quick to
+find another out as the world is slow.
+
+Mrs. Woffington burst into a passion of tears and clasped Mabel tighter
+and tighter in a half-despairing way. Mabel mistook the cause, but she
+kissed her tears away.
+
+“Dear sister,” said she, “be comforted. I love you. My heart warmed
+to you the first moment I saw you. A woman's love and gratitude are
+something. Ah! you will never find me change. This is for life, look
+you.”
+
+“God grant it!” cried the other poor woman. “Oh, it is not that, it is
+not that; it is because I am so little worthy of this. It is a sin to
+deceive you. I am not good like you. You do not know me!”
+
+“You do not know yourself if you say so!” cried Mabel; and to her hearer
+the words seemed to come from heaven. “I read faces,” said Mabel. “I
+read yours at sight, and you are what I set you down; and nobody must
+breathe a word against you, not even yourself. Do you think I am blind?
+You are beautiful, you are good, you are my sister, and I love you!”
+
+“Heaven forgive me!” thought the other. “How can I resign this angel's
+good opinion? Surely Heaven sends this blessed dew to my parched heart!”
+ And now she burned to make good her promise and earn this virtuous
+wife's love. She folded her once more in her arms, and then, taking her
+by the hand, led her tenderly into Triplet's inner room. She made her
+lie down on the bed, and placed pillows high for her like a mother, and
+leaned over her as she lay, and pressed her lips gently to her forehead.
+Her fertile brain had already digested a plan, but she had resolved that
+this pure and candid soul should take no lessons of deceit. “Lie there,”
+ said she, “till I open the door: then join us. Do you know what I am
+going to do? I am not going to restore you your husband's heart, but
+to show you it never really left you. You read faces; well, I read
+circumstances. Matters are not as you thought,” said she, with all a
+woman's tact. “I cannot explain, but you will see.” She then gave Mrs.
+Triplet peremptory orders not to let her charge rise from the bed until
+the preconcerted signal.
+
+Mrs. Vane was, in fact, so exhausted by all she had gone through
+that she was in no condition to resist. She cast a look of childlike
+confidence upon her rival, and then closed her eyes, and tried not to
+tremble all over and listen like a frightened hare.
+
+*****
+
+It is one great characteristic of genius to do great things with little
+things. Paxton could see that so small a matter as a greenhouse could be
+dilated into a crystal palace, and with two common materials--glass
+and iron--he raised the palace of the genii; the brightest idea and the
+noblest ornament added to Europe in this century--the koh-i-noor of the
+west. Livy's definition of Archimedes goes on the same ground.
+
+*****
+
+Peg Woffington was a genius in her way. On entering Triplet's studio her
+eye fell upon three trifles--Mrs. Vane's hood and mantle, the back of
+an old letter, and Mr. Triplet. (It will be seen how she worked these
+slight materials.) On the letter was written in pencil simply these two
+words, “Mabel Vane.” Mrs. Woffington wrote above these words two more,
+“Alone and unprotected.” She put this into Mr. Triplet's hand, and bade
+him take it down stairs and give it Sir Charles Pomander, whose retreat,
+she knew, must have been fictitious. “You will find him round the
+corner,” said she, “or in some shop that looks this way.” While uttering
+these words she had put on Mrs. Vane's hood and mantle.
+
+No answer was returned, and no Triplet went out of the door.
+
+She turned, and there he was kneeling on both knees close under her.
+
+“Bid me jump out of that window, madam; bid me kill those two gentlemen,
+and I will not rebel. You are a great lady, a talented lady; you have
+been insulted, and no doubt blood will flow. It ought--it is your due;
+but that innocent lady, do not compromise her!”
+
+“Oh, Mr. Triplet, you need not kneel to me. I do not wish to force you
+to render me a service. I have no right to dictate to you.”
+
+“Oh, dear!” cried Triplet, “don't talk in that way. I owe you my life,
+but I think of your own peace of mind, for you are not one to be happy
+if you injure the innocent!” He rose suddenly, and cried: “Madam,
+promise me not to stir till I come back!”
+
+“Where are you going?”
+
+“To bring the husband to his wife's feet, and so save one angel from
+despair, and another angel from a great crime.”
+
+“Well, I suppose you are wiser than I,” said she. “But, if you are in
+earnest, you had better be quick, for somehow I am rather changeable
+about these people.”
+
+“You can't help that, madam, it is your sex; you are an angel. May I
+be permitted to kiss your hand? you are all goodness and gentleness at
+bottom. I fly to Mr. Vane, and we will be back before you have time to
+repent, and give the Devil the upper hand again, my dear, good, sweet
+lady!”
+
+Away flew Triplet, all unconscious that he was not Mrs. Woffington's
+opponent, but puppet. He ran, he tore, animated by a good action, and
+spurred by the notion that he was in direct competition with the fiend
+for the possession of his benefactress. He had no sooner turned the
+corner than Mrs. Woffington, looking out of the window, observed Sir
+Charles Pomander on the watch, as she had expected. She remained at
+the window with Mrs. Vane's hood on, until Sir Charles's eye in its
+wanderings lighted on her, and then, dropping Mrs. Vane's letter from
+the window, she hastily withdrew.
+
+Sir Charles eagerly picked it up. His eye brightened when he read the
+short contents. With a self-satisfied smile he mounted the stair.
+He found in Triplet's house a lady who seemed startled at her late
+hardihood. She sat with her back to the door, her hood drawn tightly
+down, and wore an air of trembling consciousness. Sir Charles smiled
+again. He knew the sex, at least he said so. (It is an assertion often
+ventured upon.) Accordingly Sir Charles determined to come down from
+his height, and court nature and innocence in their own tones. This he
+rightly judged must be the proper course to take with Mrs. Vane. He fell
+down with mock ardor upon one knee.
+
+The supposed Mrs. Vane gave a little squeak.
+
+“Dear Mrs. Vane,” cried he, “be not alarmed; loveliness neglected, and
+simplicity deceived, insure respect as well as adoration. Ah!” (A sigh.)
+
+“Oh, get up, sir; do, please. Ah!” (A sigh.)
+
+“You sigh, sweetest of human creatures. Ah! why did not a nature like
+yours fall into hands that would have cherished it as it deserves? Had
+Heaven bestowed on me this hand, which I take--”
+
+“Oh, please, sir--”
+
+“With the profoundest respect, would I have abandoned such a treasure
+for an actress?--a Woffington! as artificial and hollow a jade as ever
+winked at a side box!”
+
+“Is she, sir?”
+
+“Notorious, madam. Your husband is the only man in London who does not
+see through her. How different are you! Even I, who have no taste for
+actresses, found myself revived, refreshed, ameliorated by that engaging
+picture of innocence and virtue you drew this morning; yourself
+the bright and central figure. Ah, dear angel! I remember all your
+favorites, and envy them their place in your recollections. Your Barbary
+mare--”
+
+“Hen, sir!
+
+“Of course I meant hen; and Gray Gillian, his old nurse--”
+
+“No, no, no! she is the mare, sir. He! he! he!”
+
+“So she is. And Dame--Dame--”
+
+“Best!”
+
+“Ah! I knew it. You see how I remember them all. And all carry me back
+to those innocent days which fleet too soon--days when an angel like
+you might have weaned me from the wicked pleasures of the town, to the
+placid delights of a rural existence!”
+
+“Alas, sir!”
+
+“You sigh. It is not yet too late. I am a convert to you; I swear it
+on this white hand. Ah! how can I relinquish it, pretty fluttering
+prisoner?”
+
+“Oh, please--”
+
+“Stay a while.”
+
+“No! please, sir--”
+
+“While I fetter thee with a worthy manacle.” Sir Charles slipped a
+diamond ring of great value upon his pretty prisoner.
+
+“La, sir, how pretty!” cried innocence.
+
+Sir Charles then undertook to prove that the luster of the ring was
+faint, compared with that of the present wearer's eyes. This did not
+suit innocence; she hung her head and fluttered, and showed a bashful
+repugnance to look her admirer in the face. Sir Charles playfully
+insisted, and Mrs. Woffington was beginning to be a little at a loss,
+when suddenly voices were heard upon the stairs.
+
+_“My husband!”_ cried the false Mrs. Vane, and in a moment she rose and
+darted into Triplet's inner apartment.
+
+Mr. Vane and Mr. Triplet were talking earnestly as they came up the
+stair. It seems the wise Triplet had prepared a little dramatic scene
+for his own refreshment, as well as for the ultimate benefit of all
+parties. He had persuaded Mr. Vane to accompany him by warm, mysterious
+promises of a happy _denouement;_ and now, having conducted that
+gentleman as far as his door, he was heard to say:
+
+“And now, sir, you shall see one who waits to forget grief,
+suspicion--all, in your arms. Behold!” and here he flung the door open.
+
+“The devil!”
+
+“You flatter me!” said Pomander, who had had time to recover his
+_aplomb,_ somewhat shaken, at first, by Mr. Vane's inopportune arrival.
+
+Now it is to be observed that Mr. Vane had not long ago seen his wife
+lying on her bed, to all appearance incapable of motion.
+
+Mr. Vane, before Triplet could recover his surprise, inquired of
+Pomander why he had sent for him. “And what,” added he, “is the grief,
+suspicion, I am, according to Mr. Triplet, to forget in your arms?”
+
+Mr. Vane added this last sentence in rather a testy manner.
+
+“Why, the fact is--” began Sir Charles, without the remotest idea of
+what the fact was going to be.
+
+“That Sir Charles Pomander--” interrupted Triplet.
+
+“But Mr. Triplet is going to explain,” said Sir Charles, keenly.
+
+“Nay, sir; be yours the pleasing duty. But, now I think of it,” resumed
+Triplet, “why not tell the simple truth? it is not a play! She I brought
+you here to see was not Sir Charles Pomander; but--”
+
+“I forbid you to complete the name!” cried Pomander.
+
+“I command you to complete the name!” cried Vane.
+
+“Gentlemen, gentlemen! how can I do both?” remonstrated Triplet.
+
+“Enough, sir!” cried Pomander. “It is a lady's secret. I am the guardian
+of that lady's honor.”
+
+“She has chosen a strange guardian of her honor!” said Vane bitterly.
+
+“Gentlemen!” cried poor Triplet, who did not at all like the turn
+things were taking, “I give you my word, she does not even know of Sir
+Charies's presence here!”
+
+“Who?” cried Vane, furiously. “Man alive! who are you speaking of?”
+
+“Mrs. Vane.”
+
+“My wife!” cried Vane, trembling with anger and jealousy. “She here! and
+with this man?”
+
+“No!” cried Triplet. “With me, with me! Not with him, of course.”
+
+“Boaster!” cried Vane, contemptuously. “But that is a part of your
+profession!”
+
+Pomander, irritated, scornfully drew from his pocket the ladies' joint
+production, which had fallen at his feet from Mrs. Woffington's hand.
+He presented this to Mr. Vane, who took it very uneasily; a mist swam
+before his eyes as he read the words: “Alone and unprotected--Mabel
+Vane.” He had no sooner read these words, than he found he loved his
+wife; when he tampered with his treasure, he did not calculate on
+another seeking it.
+
+This was Pomander's hour of triumph! He proceeded coolly to explain to
+Mr. Vane, that, Mrs. Woffington having deserted him for Mr. Vane,
+and Mr. Vane his wife for Mrs. Woffington, the bereaved parties had,
+according to custom, agreed to console each other.
+
+This soothing little speech was interrupted by Mr. Vane's sword flashing
+suddenly out of its sheath; while that gentleman, white with rage and
+jealousy, bade him instantly take to his guard, or be run through the
+body like some noxious animal.
+
+Sir Charles drew his sword, and, in spite of Triplet's weak
+interference, half a dozen passes were rapidly exchanged, when suddenly
+the door of the inner room opened, and a lady in a hood pronounced, in
+a voice which was an excellent imitation of Mrs. Vane's, the word,
+“False!”
+
+The combatants lowered their points.
+
+“You hear, sir!” cried Triplet.
+
+“You see, sir!” said Pomander.
+
+“Mabel!--wife!” cried Mr. Vane, in agony. “Oh, say this is not true! Oh,
+say that letter is a forgery! Say, at least, it was by some treachery
+you were lured to this den of iniquity! Oh, speak!”
+
+The lady silently beckoned to some person inside.
+
+“You know I loved you--you know how bitterly I repent the infatuation
+that brought me to the feet of another!”
+
+The lady replied not, though Vane's soul appeared to hang upon her
+answer. But she threw the door open and there appeared another lady,
+the real Mrs. Vane. Mrs. Woffington then threw off her hood, and, to
+Sir Charles Pomander's consternation, revealed the features of that
+ingenious person, who seemed born to outwit him.
+
+“You heard that fervent declaration, madam?” said she to Mrs. Vane. “I
+present to you, madam, a gentleman who regrets that he mistook the real
+direction of his feelings. And to you, sir,” continued she, with great
+dignity, “I present a lady who will never mistake either her feelings or
+her duty.”
+
+“Ernest! dear Ernest!” cried Mrs. Vane, blushing as if she was the
+culprit. And she came forward all love and tenderness.
+
+Her truant husband kneeled at her feet of course. No! he said, rather
+sternly, “How came you here, Mabel?”
+
+“Mrs. Vane,” said the actress, “fancied you had mislaid that
+weathercock, your heart, in Covent Garden, and that an actress had seen
+in it a fit companion for her own, and had feloniously appropriated it.
+She came to me to inquire after it.”
+
+“But this letter, signed by you?” said Vane, still addressing Mabel.
+
+“Was written by me on a paper which accidentally contained Mrs. Vane's
+name. The fact is, Mr. Vane--I can hardly look you in the face--I had a
+little wager with Sir Charles here; his diamond ring--which you may
+see has become my diamond ring”--a horrible wry face from Sir
+Charles--“against my left glove that I could bewitch a country
+gentleman's imagination, and make him think me an angel. Unfortunately
+the owner of his heart appeared, and, like poor Mr. Vane, took our play
+for earnest. It became necessary to disabuse her and to open your eyes.
+Have I done so?”
+
+“You have, madam,” said Vane, wincing at each word she said. But at
+last, by a mighty effort, he mastered himself, and, coming to Mrs.
+Woffington with a quivering lip, he held out his hand suddenly in a
+very manly way. “I have been the dupe of my own vanity,” said he, “and
+I thank you for this lesson.” Poor Mrs. Woffington's fortitude had
+well-nigh left her at this.
+
+“Mabel,” he cried, “is this humiliation any punishment for my folly? any
+guaranty for my repentance? Can you forgive me?”
+
+“It is all forgiven, Ernest. But, oh, you are mistaken.” She glided to
+Mrs. Woffington. “What do we not owe you, sister?” whispered she.
+
+“Nothing! that word pays all,” was the reply. She then slipped her
+address into Mrs. Vane's hand, and, courtesying to all the company, she
+hastily left the room.
+
+Sir Charles Pomander followed; but he was not quick enough. She got a
+start, and purposely avoided him, and for three days neither the public
+nor private friends saw this poor woman's face.
+
+Mr. and Mrs. Vane prepared to go also; but Mrs. Vane would thank good
+Mr. Triplet and Mrs. Triplet for their kindness to her.
+
+Triplet the benevolent blushed, was confused and delighted; but
+suddenly, turning somewhat sorrowful, he said: “Mr. Vane, madam, made
+use of an expression which caused a momentary pang. He called this a den
+of iniquity. Now this is my studio! But never mind.”
+
+Mr. Vane asked his pardon for so absurd an error, and the pair left
+Triplet in all the enjoyment which does come now and then to an honest
+man, whether this dirty little world will or not.
+
+A coach was called and they went home to Bloomsbury. Few words were
+said; but the repentant husband often silently pressed this angel to his
+bosom, and the tears which found their way to her beautiful eyelashes
+were tears of joy.
+
+This weakish, and consequently villainous, though not ill-disposed
+person would have gone down to Willoughby that night; but his wife had
+great good sense. She would not take her husband off, like a school-boy
+caught out of bounds. She begged him to stay while she made certain
+purchases; but, for all that, her heart burned to be at home. So in less
+than a week after the events we have related they left London.
+
+Meantime, every day Mrs. Vane paid a quiet visit to Mrs. Woffington (for
+some days the actress admitted no other visitor), and was with her but
+two hours before she left London. On that occasion she found her very
+sad.
+
+“I shall never see you again in this world,” said she; “but I beg of you
+to write to me, that my mind may be in contact with yours.”
+
+She then asked Mabel, in her half-sorrowful, half-bitter way, how many
+months it would be ere she was forgotten.
+
+Mabel answered by quietly crying. So then they embraced; and Mabel
+assured her friend she was not one of those who change their minds. “It
+is for life, dear sister; it is for life,” cried she.
+
+“Swear this to me,” said the other, almost sternly. “But no. I have more
+confidence in that candid face and pure nature than in a human being's
+oath. If you are happy, remember you owe me something. If you are
+unhappy, come to me, and I will love you as men cannot love.”
+
+Then vows passed between them, for a singular tie bound these two women;
+and then the actress showed a part at least of her sore heart to her new
+sister; and that sister was surprised and grieved, and pitied her truly
+and deeply, and they wept on each other's neck; and at last they were
+fain to part. They parted; and true it was, they never met again in this
+world. They parted in sorrow; but when they meet again, it shall be with
+joy.
+
+Women are generally such faithless, unscrupulous and pitiless humbugs
+in their dealings with their own sex--which, whatever they may say, they
+despise at heart--that I am happy to be able to say, Mrs. Vane proved
+true as steel. She was a noble-minded, simple-minded creature; she was
+also a constant creature. Constancy is a rare, a beautiful, a godlike
+virtue.
+
+Four times every year she wrote a long letter to Mrs. Woffington; and
+twice a year, in the cold weather, she sent her a hamper of country
+delicacies that would have victualed a small garrison. And when
+her sister left this earthly scene--a humble, pious, long-repentant
+Christian--Mrs. Vane wore mourning for her, and sorrowed over her; but
+not as those who cannot hope to meet again.
+
+*****
+
+My story as a work of art--good, bad or indifferent--ends with that last
+sentence. If a reader accompanies me further, I shall feel flattered,
+and he does so at his own risk.
+
+My reader knows that all this befell long ago. That Woffington is gay,
+and Triplet sad, no more. That Mabel's, and all the bright eyes of that
+day, have long been dim, and all its cunning voices hushed. Judge
+then whether I am one of those happy story-tellers who can end with
+a wedding. No! this story must wind up, as yours and mine
+must--to-morrow--or to-morrow--or to-morrow! when our little sand is
+run.
+
+Sir Charles Pomander lived a man of pleasure until sixty. He then
+became a man of pain; he dragged the chain about eight years, and died
+miserably.
+
+Mr. Cibber not so much died as “slipped his wind”--a nautical expression
+that conveys the idea of an easy exit. He went off, quiet and genteel.
+He was past eighty, and had lived fast. His servant called him at seven
+in the morning. “I will shave at eight,” said Mr. Cibber. John brought
+the hot water at eight; but his master had taken advantage of this
+interval in his toilet to die!--to avoid shaving?
+
+Snarl and Soaper conducted the criticism of their day with credit and
+respectability until a good old age, and died placidly a natural death,
+like twaddle, sweet or sour.
+
+The Triplets, while their patroness lived, did pretty well. She got a
+tragedy of his accepted at her theater. She made him send her a copy,
+and with her scissors cut out about half; sometimes thinning, sometimes
+cutting bodily away. But, lo! the inherent vanity of Mr. Triplet came
+out strong. Submissively, but obstinately, he fought for the discarded
+beauties. Unluckily, he did this one day that his patroness was in one
+of her bitter humors. So she instantly gave him back his manuscript,
+with a sweet smile owned herself inferior in judgment to him, and left
+him unmolested.
+
+Triplet breathed freely; a weight was taken off him. The savage steel
+(he applied this title to the actress's scissors) had spared his
+_purpurei panni._ He was played, pure and intact, a calamity the rest of
+us grumbling escape.
+
+But it did so happen that the audience were of the actress's mind, and
+found the words too exuberant, and the business of the play too scanty
+in proportion. At last their patience was so sorely tried that they
+supplied one striking incident to a piece deficient in facts. They gave
+the manager the usual broad hint, and in the middle of Triplet's third
+act a huge veil of green baize descended upon “The Jealous Spaniard.”
+
+Failing here, Mrs. Woffington contrived often to befriend him in his
+other arts, and moreover she often sent Mr. Triplet what she called a
+snug investment, a loan of ten pounds, to be repaid at Doomsday, with
+interest and compound interest, according to the Scriptures; and,
+although she laughed, she secretly believed she was to get her ten
+pounds back, double and treble. And I believe so too.
+
+Some years later Mrs. Triplet became eventful. She fell ill, and lay
+a dying; but one fine morning, after all hope had been given up, she
+suddenly rose and dressed herself. She was quite well in body now, but
+insane.
+
+She continued in this state a month, and then, by God's mercy, she
+recovered her reason; but now the disease fell another step, and lighted
+upon her temper--a more athletic vixen was not to be found. She had
+spoiled Triplet for this by being too tame, so when the dispensation
+came they sparred daily. They were now thoroughly unhappy. They were
+poor as ever, and their benefactress was dead, and they had learned to
+snap. A speculative tour had taken this pair to Bristol, then the second
+city in England. They sojourned in the suburbs.
+
+One morning the postman brought a letter for Triplet, who was showing
+his landlord's boy how to plant onions. (N. B.--Triplet had never
+planted an onion, but he was one of your _a priori_ gentlemen, and could
+show anybody how to do anything.) Triplet held out his hand for the
+letter, but the postman held out his hand for a half crown first. Trip's
+profession had transpired, and his clothes inspired diffidence. Triplet
+appealed to his good feeling.
+
+He replied with exultation, “That he had none left.” (A middle-aged
+postman, no doubt.)
+
+Triplet then suddenly started from entreaty to King Cambyses' vein. In
+vain!
+
+Mrs. Triplet came down, and essayed the blandishments of the softer sex.
+In vain! And, as there were no assets, the postman marched off down the
+road.
+
+Mrs. Triplet glided after him like an assassin, beckoning on Triplet,
+who followed, doubtful of her designs. Suddenly (truth compels me to
+relate this) she seized the obdurate official from behind, pinned
+both his arms to his side, and with her nose furiously telegraphed her
+husband.
+
+He, animated by her example, plunged upon the man and tore the letter
+from his hand and opened it before his eyes.
+
+It happened to be a very windy morning, and when he opened the letter an
+inclosure, printed on much finer paper, was caught into the air and went
+down the wind. Triplet followed in kangaroo leaps, like a dancer making
+a flying exit.
+
+The postman cried on all good citizens for help. Some collected and
+laughed at him; Mrs. Triplet explaining that they were poor, and could
+not pay half a crown for the freight of half an ounce of paper. She held
+him convulsively until Triplet reappeared.
+
+That gentleman on his return was ostentatiously calm and dignified. “You
+are, or were, in perturbation about half a crown,” said he. “There,
+sir, is a twenty-pound note, oblige me with nineteen pounds seventeen
+shillings and sixpence. Should your resources be unequal to such a
+demand, meet me at the 'Green Cat and Brown Frogs,' after dinner, when
+you shall receive your half-crown, and drink another upon the occasion
+of my sudden accession to unbounded affluence.”
+
+The postman was staggered by the sentence and overawed by the note, and
+chose the “Cat and Frogs,” and liquid half-crown.
+
+Triplet took his wife down the road and showed her the letter and
+inclosure. The letter ran thus:
+
+“SIR--We beg respectfully to inform you that our late friend and client,
+James Triplet, Merchant, of the Minories, died last August, without a
+will, and that you are his heir.
+
+“His property amounts to about twenty thousand pounds, besides some
+reversions. Having possessed the confidence of your late uncle we
+should feel honored and gratified if you should think us worthy to act
+professionally for yourself.
+
+“We inclose twenty pounds, and beg you will draw upon us as far as five
+thousand pounds, should you have immediate occasion.
+
+“We are, sir,
+
+“Your humble servants,
+
+“JAMES AND JOHN ALLMITT.”
+
+It was some time before these children of misfortune could realize this
+enormous stroke of compensation; but at last it worked its way into
+their spirits, and they began to sing, to triumph, and dance upon the
+king's highway.
+
+Mrs. Triplet was the first to pause, and take better views. “Oh, James!”
+ she cried, “we have suffered much! we have been poor, but honest, and
+the Almighty has looked upon us at last!”
+
+Then they began to reproach themselves.
+
+“Oh, James! I have been a peevish woman--an ill wife to you, this many
+years!”
+
+“No, no!” cried Triplet, with tears in his eyes. “It is I who have been
+rough and brutal. Poverty tried us too hard; but we were not like the
+rest of them--we were always faithful to the altar. And the Almighty has
+seen us, though we often doubted it.”
+
+“I never doubted that, James.”
+
+So then the poor things fell on their knees upon the public road, and
+thanked God. If any man had seen them, he would have said they were mad.
+Yet madder things are done every day by gentlemen with faces as grave as
+the parish bull's. And then they rose and formed their little plans.
+
+Triplet was for devoting four-fifths to charity, and living like a
+prince on the remainder. But Mrs. Triplet thought the poor were entitled
+to no more than two-thirds, and they themselves ought to bask in a
+third, to make up for what they had gone through; and then suddenly she
+sighed, and burst into tears. “Lucy! Lucy!” sobbed she.
+
+Yes, reader, God had taken little Lucy! And her mother cried to think
+all this wealth and comfort had come too late for her darling child.
+
+“Do not cry. Lucy is richer, a thousand times, than you are, with your
+twenty thousand pounds.”
+
+Their good resolutions were carried out, for a wonder. Triplet lived
+for years, the benefactor of all the loose fish that swim in and round
+theaters; and, indeed, the unfortunate seldom appealed to him in vain.
+He now predominated over the arts, instead of climbing them. In his
+latter day he became an oracle, as far as the science of acting was
+concerned; and, what is far more rare, he really got to know _something_
+about it. This was owing to two circumstances: first, he ceased to run
+blindfold in a groove behind the scenes; second, he became a frequenter
+of the first row of the pit, and that is where the whole critic, and
+two-thirds of the true actor, is made.
+
+On one point, to his dying day, his feelings guided his judgment. He
+never could see an actress equal to his Woffington. Mrs. Abington
+was grace personified, but so was Woffington, said the old man: and
+Abington's voice is thin, Woffington's was sweet and mellow. When Jordan
+rose, with her voice of honey, her dewy freshness, and her heavenly
+laugh, that melted in along with her words, like the gold in the quartz,
+Triplet was obliged to own her the goddess of beautiful gayety; but
+still he had the last word: “Woffington was all _she_ is, except her
+figure. Woffington was a Hebe; your Nell Jordan is little better than a
+dowdy.”
+
+Triplet almost reached the present century. He passed through great
+events, but they did not excite him; his eye was upon the arts. When
+Napoleon drew his conquering sword on England, Triplet's remark was:
+“Now we shall be driven upon native talent, thank Heaven!” The storms
+of Europe shook not Triplet. The fact is, nothing that happened on the
+great stage of the world seemed real to him. He believed in nothing
+where there was no curtain visible. But even the grotesque are not good
+in vain. Many an eye was wet round his dying bed, and many a tear fell
+upon his grave. He made his final exit in the year of grace 1799. And I,
+who laugh at him, would leave this world to-day to be with him; for I am
+tossing at sea--he is in port.
+
+*****
+
+A straightforward character like Mabel's becomes a firm character
+with years. Long ere she was forty, her hand gently but steadily ruled
+Willoughby House, and all in it. She and Mr. Vane lived very happily; he
+gave her no fresh cause for uneasiness. Six months after their return,
+she told him what burned in that honest heart of hers, the truth about
+Mrs. Woffington. The water rushed to his eyes, but his heart was now
+wholly his wife's; and gratitude to Mrs. Woffington for her noble
+conduct was the only sentiment awakened.
+
+“You must repay her, dearest,” said he. “I know you love her, and until
+to-day it gave me pain; now it gives me pleasure. We owe her much.”
+
+The happy, innocent life of Mabel Vane is soon summed up. Frank as the
+day, constant as the sun, pure as the dew, she passed the golden years
+preparing herself and others for a still brighter eternity. At home, it
+was she who warmed and cheered the house, and the hearth, more than all
+Christmas fires. Abroad, she shone upon the poor like the sun. She led
+her beloved husband by the hand to Heaven. She led her children the same
+road; and she was leading her grandchildren when the angel of death came
+for her; and she slept in peace.
+
+Many remember her. For she alone, of all our tale, lived in this present
+century; but they speak of her as “old Madam Vane”--her whom we knew so
+young and fresh.
+
+She lies in Willoughby Church--her mortal part; her spirit is with the
+spirits of our mothers and sisters, reader, that are gone before us;
+with the tender mothers, the chaste wives, the loyal friends, and the
+just women of all ages.
+
+RESURGET.
+
+I come to her last, who went first; but I could not have stayed by the
+others, when once I had laid my darling asleep. It seemed for a while as
+if the events of our tale did her harm; but it was not so in the end.
+
+Not many years afterward, she was engaged by Mr. Sheridan, at a very
+heavy salary, and went to Dublin. Here the little girl, who had often
+carried a pitcher on her head down to the Liffey, and had played Polly
+Peachum in a booth, became a lion; dramatic, political and literary, and
+the center of the wit of that wittiest of cities.
+
+But the Dublin ladies and she did not coalesce. They said she was a
+naughty woman, and not fit for them morally. She said they had but two
+topics, “silks and scandal,” and were unfit for her intellectually.
+
+This was the saddest part of her history. But it is darkest just before
+sunrise. She returned to London. Not long after, it so happened that she
+went to a small church in the city one Sunday afternoon. The preacher
+was such as we have often heard; but not so this poor woman, in her day
+of sapless theology, ere John Wesley waked the snoring church. Instead
+of sending a dry clatter of morality about their ears, or evaporating
+the Bible in the thin generalities of the pulpit, this man drove God's
+truths home to the hearts of men and women. In his hands the divine
+virtues were thunderbolts, not swans' down. With good sense, plain
+speaking, and a heart yearning for the souls of his brethren and his
+sisters, he stormed the bosoms of many; and this afternoon, as he
+reasoned like Paul of righteousness, temperance, and judgment to come,
+sinners trembled--and Margaret Woffington was of those who trembled.
+
+After this day, she came ever to the narrow street where shone this
+house of God; and still new light burst upon her heart and conscience.
+Here she learned why she was unhappy; here she learned how alone she
+could be happy; here she learned to know herself; and, the moment she
+knew herself, she abhorred herself, and repented in dust and ashes.
+
+This strong and straightforward character made no attempt to reconcile
+two things that an average Christian would have continued to reconcile.
+Her interest fell in a moment before her new sense of right. She flung
+her profession from her like a poisonous weed.
+
+Long before this, Mrs. Vane had begged her to leave the stage. She had
+replied, that it was to her what wine is to weak stomachs. “But,” added
+she, “do not fear that I will ever crawl down hill, and unravel my own
+reputation; nor will I ever do as I have seen others--stand groaning at
+the wing, to go on giggling and come off gasping. No! the first night
+the boards do not spring beneath my feet, and the pulse of the public
+beat under my hand, I am gone! Next day, at rehearsal, instead
+of Woffington, a note will come, to tell the manager that
+henceforth Woffington is herself--at Twickenham, or Richmond, or
+Harrow-on-the-Hill, far from his dust, his din, and his glare--quiet,
+till God takes her. Amid grass, and flowers, and charitable deeds.”
+
+This day had not come. It was in the zenith of her charms and her fame
+that she went home one night after a play, and never entered a theater,
+by the front door or back door, again. She declined all leave-taking and
+ceremony.
+
+“When a publican shuts up shop and ceases to diffuse liquid poison, he
+does not invite the world to put up the shutters; neither will I.
+Actors overrate themselves ridiculously,” added she; “I am not of that
+importance to the world, nor the world to me. I fling away a dirty old
+glove instead of soiling my fingers filling it with more guineas, and
+the world loses in me, what? another old glove, full of words; half
+of them idle, the rest wicked, untrue, silly, or impure. _Rougissons,
+taisons-nous, et partons.”_
+
+She now changed her residence, and withdrew politely from her old
+associates, courting two classes only, the good and the poor. She had
+always supported her mother and sister; but now charity became her
+system. The following is characteristic:
+
+A gentleman who had greatly admired this dashing actress met one day, in
+the suburbs, a lady in an old black silk gown and a gray shawl, with a
+large basket on her arm. She showed him its contents--worsted stockings
+of prodigious thickness--which she was carrying to some of her
+_proteges._
+
+“But surely that is a waste of your valuable time,” remonstrated her
+admirer. “Much better buy them.”
+
+“But, my good soul,” replied the representative of Sir Harry Wildair,
+“you can't buy them. Nobody in this wretched town can knit worsted hose
+except Woffington.”
+
+Conversions like this are open to just suspicion, and some did not fail
+to confound her with certain great sinners, who have turned austere
+self-deceivers when sin smiled no more. But this was mere conjecture.
+The facts were clear, and speaking to the contrary. This woman left
+folly at its brightest, and did not become austere. On the contrary,
+though she laughed less, she was observed to smile far oftener than
+before. She was a humble and penitent, but cheerful, hopeful Christian.
+
+Another class of detractors took a somewhat opposite ground. They
+accused her of bigotry for advising a young female friend against the
+stage as a business. But let us hear herself. This is what she said to
+the girl:
+
+“At the bottom of my heart, I always loved and honored virtue. Yet the
+tendencies of the stage so completely overcame my good sentiments that
+I was for years a worthless woman. It is a situation of uncommon and
+incessant temptation. Ask yourself, my child, whether there is nothing
+else you can do, but this. It is, I think, our duty and our wisdom to
+fly temptation whenever we can, as it is to resist it when we cannot
+escape it.”
+
+Was this the tone of bigotry?
+
+Easy in fortune, penitent, but cheerful, Mrs. Woffington had now but one
+care--to efface the memory of her former self, and to give as many years
+to purity and piety as had gone to folly and frailty. This was not
+to be! The Almighty did not permit, or perhaps I should say, did not
+require this.
+
+Some unpleasant symptoms had long attracted her notice, but in the
+bustle of her profession had received little attention. She was now
+persuaded by her own medical attendant to consult Dr. Bowdler, who had a
+great reputation, and had been years ago an acquaintance and an admirer.
+He visited her, he examined her by means little used in that day, and he
+saw at once that her days were numbered.
+
+Dr. Bowdler's profession and experience had not steeled his heart as
+they generally do and must do. He could not tell her this sad news, so
+he asked her for pen and paper, and said, I will write a prescription
+to Mr. ----. He then wrote, not a prescription, but a few lines, begging
+Mr. ---- to convey the cruel intelligence by degrees, and with care and
+tenderness. “It is all we can do for her,” said he.
+
+He looked so grave while writing the supposed prescription, that it
+unluckily occurred to Mrs. Woffington to look over him. She stole archly
+behind him, and, with a smile on her face--read her death warrant.
+
+It was a cruel stroke! A gasping sigh broke from her. At this Dr.
+Bowdler looked up, and to his horror saw the sweet face he had doomed
+to the tomb looking earnestly and anxiously at him, and very pale and
+grave. He was shocked, and, strange to say, she, whose death-warrant
+he had signed, ran and brought him a glass of wine, for he was quite
+overcome. Then she gave him her hand in her own sweet way, and bade him
+not grieve for her, for she was not afraid to die, and had long learned
+that “life is a walking shadow, a poor, poor player, who frets and
+struts his hour upon the stage, and then is heard no more.”
+
+But no sooner was the doctor gone than she wept bitterly. Poor soul!
+she had set her heart upon living as many years to God as she had to the
+world, and she had hoped to wipe out her former self.
+
+“Alas!” she said to her sister, “I have done more harm than I can ever
+hope to good now; and my long life of folly and wickedness will be
+remembered--will be what they call famous; my short life of repentance
+who will know, or heed, or take to profit?”
+
+But she soon ceased to repine. She bowed to the will of Heaven, and set
+her house in order, and awaited her summons. The tranquillity of her
+life and her courageous spirit were unfavorable to the progress of
+disease, and I am glad to say she was permitted to live nearly three
+years after this, and these three years were the happiest period of her
+whole life. Works of piety and love made the days eventful. She was at
+home now--she had never been at home in folly and loose living. All her
+bitterness was gone now, with its cause.
+
+Reader, it was with her as it is with many an autumn day; clouds darken
+the sun, rain and wind sweep over all--till day declines. But then comes
+one heavenly hour, when all ill things seem spent. There is no more
+wind, no more rain. The great sun comes forth--not fiery bright indeed,
+but full of tranquil glory, and warms the sky with ruby waves, and the
+hearts of men with hope, as, parting with us for a little space, he
+glides slowly and peacefully to rest.
+
+So fared it with this humble, penitent, and now happy Christian.
+
+A part of her desire was given her. She lived long enough to read a firm
+recantation of her former self, to show the world a great repentance,
+and to leave upon indelible record one more proof, what alone is true
+wisdom, and where alone true joys are to be found.
+
+She endured some physical pain, as all must who die in their prime. But
+this never wrung a sigh from her great heart; and within she had the
+peace of God, which passes all understanding.
+
+I am not strong enough to follow her to her last hour; nor is it needed.
+Enough that her own words came true. When the great summons came, it
+found her full of hope, and peace, and joy; sojourning, not dwelling,
+upon earth; far from dust and din and vice; the Bible in her hand,
+the Cross in her heart; quiet; amid grass, and flowers, and charitable
+deeds.
+
+“NON OMNEM MORITURAM.”
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Peg Woffington, by Charles Reade
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+
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+ PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" >
+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <title>
+ Peg Woffington, by Charles Reade
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ div.middle { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; }
+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
+ .pagenum {display:inline; font-size: 70%; font-style:normal;
+ margin: 0; padding: 0; position: absolute; right: 1%;
+ text-align: right;}
+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
+
+</style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Peg Woffington, by Charles Reade
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Peg Woffington
+
+Author: Charles Reade
+
+Release Date: January 14, 2010 [EBook #3670]
+Last Updated: March 5, 2018
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PEG WOFFINGTON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by James Rusk, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ PEG WOFFINGTON
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By Charles Reade
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To T. Taylor, Esq., my friend, and coadjutor in the comedy of &ldquo;Masks and
+ Faces,&rdquo; to whom the reader owes much of the best matter in this tale: and
+ to the memory of Margaret Woffington, falsely <i>summed up</i> until
+ to-day, this &ldquo;Dramatic Story&rdquo; is inscribed by CHARLES READE.&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LONDON. Dec. 15, 1852.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ Contents
+ </h2>
+ <table summary="">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ ABOUT the middle of the last century, at eight o'clock in the evening, in
+ a large but poor apartment, a man was slumbering on a rough couch. His
+ rusty and worn suit of black was of a piece with his uncarpeted room, the
+ deal table of home manufacture, and its slim unsnuffed candle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man was Triplet, scene painter, actor and writer of sanguinary plays,
+ in which what ought to be, viz., truth, plot, situation and dialogue, were
+ not; and what ought not to be, were&mdash;<i>scilicet,</i> small talk, big
+ talk, fops, ruffians, and ghosts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His three mediocrities fell so short of one talent that he was sometimes
+ <i>impransus.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He slumbered, but uneasily; the dramatic author was uppermost, and his
+ &ldquo;Demon of the Hayloft&rdquo; hung upon the thread of popular favor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On his uneasy slumber entered from the theater Mrs. Triplet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was a lady who in one respect fell behind her husband; she lacked his
+ variety in ill-doing, but she recovered herself by doing her one thing a
+ shade worse than he did any of his three. She was what is called in grim
+ sport an actress; she had just cast her mite of discredit on royalty by
+ playing the Queen, and had trundled home the moment the breath was out of
+ her royal body. She came in rotatory with fatigue, and fell, gristle, into
+ a chair; she wrenched from her brow a diadem and eyed it with contempt,
+ took from her pocket a sausage, and contemplated it with respect and
+ affection, placed it in a frying-pan on the fire, and entered her bedroom,
+ meaning to don a loose wrapper, and dethrone herself into comfort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the poor woman was shot walking by Morpheus, and subsided altogether;
+ for dramatic performances, amusing and exciting to youth seated in the
+ pit, convey a certain weariness to those bright beings who sparkle on the
+ stage for bread and cheese.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Royalty, disposed of, still left its trail of events. The sausage began to
+ &ldquo;spit.&rdquo; The sound was hardly out of its body, when poor Triplet writhed
+ like a worm on a hook. &ldquo;Spitter, spittest,&rdquo; went the sausage. Triplet
+ groaned, and at last his inarticulate murmurs became words: &ldquo;That's right,
+ pit now, that is so reasonable to condemn a poor fellow's play before you
+ have heard it out.&rdquo; Then, with a change of tone, &ldquo;Tom,&rdquo; muttered he, &ldquo;they
+ are losing their respect for specters; if they do, hunger will make a
+ ghost of me.&rdquo; Next he fancied the clown or somebody had got into his
+ ghost's costume.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dear,&rdquo; said the poor dreamer, &ldquo;the clown makes a very pretty specter,
+ with his ghastly white face, and his blood-boltered cheeks and nose. I
+ never saw the fun of a clown before, no! no! no! it is not the clown, it
+ is worse, much worse; oh, dear, ugh!&rdquo; and Triplet rolled off the couch
+ like Richard the Third. He sat a moment on the floor, with a finger in
+ each eye; and then, finding he was neither daubing, ranting, nor deluging
+ earth with &ldquo;acts,&rdquo; he accused himself of indolence, and sat down to write
+ a small tale of blood and bombast; he took his seat at the deal table with
+ some alacrity, for he had recently made a discovery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How to write well, <i>rien que cela.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;First, think in as homely a way as you can; next, shove your pen under
+ the thought, and lift it by polysyllables to the true level of fiction,&rdquo;
+ (when done, find a publisher&mdash;if you can). &ldquo;This,&rdquo; said Triplet,
+ &ldquo;insures common sense to your ideas, which does pretty well for a basis,&rdquo;
+ said Triplet, apologetically, &ldquo;and elegance to the dress they wear.&rdquo;
+ Triplet, then casting his eyes round in search of such actual
+ circumstances as could be incorporated on this plan with fiction, began to
+ work thus:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+<span style="font-family: Courier New; font-size:10pt">
+ TRIPLET'S FACTS. TRIPLET'S FICTION.
+
+ A farthing dip is on the table. A solitary candle cast its pale
+ gleams around.
+
+ It wants snuffing. Its elongated wick betrayed an owner
+ steeped in oblivion.
+
+ He jumped up, and snuffed it. He rose languidly, and trimmed it with
+ his fingers. Burned his with an
+ instrument that he had by his fingers,
+ and swore a little. side for that
+ purpose, and muttered a silent
+ ejaculation
+</span>
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Before, however, the mole Triplet could undermine literature and level it
+ with the dust, various interruptions and divisions broke in upon his
+ design, and <i>sic nos servavit</i> Apollo. As he wrote the last sentence,
+ a loud rap came to his door. A servant in livery brought him a note from
+ Mr. Vane, dated Covent Garden. Triplet's eyes sparkled, he bustled, wormed
+ himself into a less rusty coat, and started off to the Theater Royal,
+ Covent Garden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In those days, the artists of the pen and the brush ferreted patrons,
+ instead of aiming to be indispensable to the public, the only patron worth
+ a single gesture of the quill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Vane had conversed with Triplet, that is, let Triplet talk to him in a
+ coffee-house, and Triplet, the most sanguine of unfortunate men, had
+ already built a series of expectations upon that interview, when this note
+ arrived. Leaving him on his road from Lambeth to Covent Garden, we must
+ introduce more important personages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Vane was a wealthy gentleman from Shropshire, whom business had called
+ to London four months ago, and now pleasure detained. Business still
+ occupied the letters he sent now and then to his native county; but it had
+ ceased to occupy the writer. He was a man of learning and taste, as times
+ went; and his love of the Arts had taken him some time before our tale to
+ the theaters, then the resort of all who pretended to taste; and it was
+ thus he had become fascinated by Mrs. Woffington, a lady of great beauty,
+ and a comedian high in favor with the town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first night he saw her was an epoch in the history of this gentleman's
+ mind. He had learning and refinement, and he had not great practical
+ experience, and such men are most open to impression from the stage. He
+ saw a being, all grace and bright nature, move like a goddess among the
+ stiff puppets of the scene; her glee and her pathos were equally catching,
+ she held a golden key at which all the doors of the heart flew open. Her
+ face, too, was as full of goodness as intelligence&mdash;it was like no
+ other farce; the heart bounded to meet it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He rented a box at her theater. He was there every night before the
+ curtain drew up; and I'm sorry to say, he at last took half a dislike to
+ Sunday&mdash;Sunday &ldquo;which knits up the raveled sleave of care,&rdquo; Sunday
+ &ldquo;tired nature's sweet restorer,&rdquo; because on Sunday there was no Peg
+ Woffington. At first he regarded her as a being of another sphere, an
+ incarnation of poetry and art; but by degrees his secret aspirations
+ became bolder. She was a woman; there were men who knew her; some of them
+ inferior to him in position, and, he flattered himself, in mind. He had
+ even heard a tale against her character. To him her face was its
+ confutation, and he knew how loose-tongued is calumny; but still&mdash;!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last, one day he sent her a letter, unsigned. This letter expressed his
+ admiration of her talent in warm but respectful terms; the writer told her
+ it had become necessary to his heart to return her in some way his thanks
+ for the land of enchantment to which she had introduced him. Soon after
+ this, choice flowers found their way to her dressing-room every night, and
+ now and then verses and precious stones mingled with her roses and
+ eglantine. And oh, how he watched the great actress's eye all the night;
+ how he tried to discover whether she looked oftener toward his box than
+ the corresponding box on the other side of the house. Did she notice him,
+ or did she not? What a point gained, if she was conscious of his nightly
+ attendance. She would feel he was a friend, not a mere auditor. He was
+ jealous of the pit, on whom Mrs. Woffington lavished her smiles without
+ measure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last, one day he sent her a wreath of flowers, and implored her, if any
+ word he had said to her had pleased or interested her, to wear this wreath
+ that night. After he had done this he trembled; he had courted a decision,
+ when, perhaps, his safety lay in patience and time. She made her <i>entree;</i>
+ he turned cold as she glided into sight from the prompter's side; he
+ raised his eyes slowly and fearfully from her feet to her head; her head
+ was bare, wreathed only by its own rich glossy honors. &ldquo;Fool!&rdquo; thought he,
+ &ldquo;to think she would hang frivolities upon that glorious head for me.&rdquo; Yet
+ his disappointment told him he had really hoped it; he would not have sat
+ out the play but for a leaden incapacity of motion that seized him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The curtain drew up for the fifth act, and!&mdash;could he believe his
+ eyes?&mdash;Mrs. Woffington stood upon the stage with his wreath upon her
+ graceful head. She took away his breath. She spoke the epilogue, and, as
+ the curtain fell, she lifted her eyes, he thought, to his box, and made
+ him a distinct, queen-like courtesy; his heart fluttered to his mouth, and
+ he walked home on wings and tiptoe. In short&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Woffington, as an actress, justified a portion of this enthusiasm;
+ she was one of the truest artists of her day; a fine lady in her hands was
+ a lady, with the genteel affectation of a gentlewoman, not a harlot's
+ affectation, which is simply and without exaggeration what the stage
+ commonly gives us for a fine lady; an old woman in her hands was a
+ thorough woman, thoroughly old, not a cackling young person of epicene
+ gender. She played Sir Harry Wildair like a man, which is how he ought to
+ be played (or, which is better still, not at all), so that Garrick
+ acknowledged her as a male rival, and abandoned the part he no longer
+ monopolized.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it very, very rarely happens that a woman of her age is high enough in
+ art and knowledge to do these things. In players, vanity cripples art at
+ every step. The young actress who is not a Woffington aims to display
+ herself by means of her part, which is vanity; not to raise her part by
+ sinking herself in it, which is art. It has been my misfortune to see
+ &mdash;&mdash;, and&mdash;&mdash;, and &mdash;&mdash;, et ceteras, play
+ the man; Nature, forgive them, if you can, for art never will; they never
+ reached any idea more manly than a steady resolve to exhibit the points of
+ a woman with greater ferocity than they could in a gown. But consider,
+ ladies, a man is not the meanest of the brute creation, so how can he be
+ an unwomanly female? This sort of actress aims not to give her author's
+ creation to the public, but to trot out the person instead of the
+ creation, and shows sots what a calf it has&mdash;and is.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vanity, vanity! all is vanity! Mesdames les Charlatanes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Margaret Woffington was of another mold; she played the ladies of high
+ comedy with grace, distinction, and delicacy. But in Sir Harry Wildair she
+ parted with a woman's mincing foot and tongue, and played the man in a
+ style large, spirited and <i>elance.</i> As Mrs. Day (committee) she
+ painted wrinkles on her lovely face so honestly that she was taken for
+ threescore, and she carried out the design with voice and person, and did
+ a vulgar old woman to the life. She disfigured her own beauties to show
+ the beauty of her art; in a word, she was an artist! It does not follow
+ she was the greatest artist that ever breathed; far from it. Mr. Vane was
+ carried to this notion by passion and ignorance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the evening of our tale he was at his post patiently sitting out one of
+ those sanguinary discourses our rude forefathers thought were tragic
+ plays. <i>Sedet aeternumque Sedebit Infelix Theseus,</i> because Mrs.
+ Woffington is to speak the epilogue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These epilogues were curiosities of the human mind; they whom, just to
+ ourselves and <i>them,</i> we call our <i>forbears,</i> had an idea their
+ blood and bombast were not ridiculous enough in themselves, so when the
+ curtain had fallen on the <i>debris</i> of the <i>dramatis personae,</i>
+ and of common sense, they sent on an actress to turn all the sentiment so
+ laboriously acquired into a jest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To insist that nothing good or beautiful shall be carried safe from a play
+ out into the street was the bigotry of English horseplay. Was a Lucretia
+ the heroine of the tragedy, she was careful in the epilogue to speak like
+ Messalina. Did a king's mistress come to hunger and repentance, she
+ disinfected all the <i>petites maitresses</i> in the house of the moral,
+ by assuring them that sin is a joke, repentance a greater, and that she
+ individually was ready for either if they would but cry, laugh and pay.
+ Then the audience used to laugh, and if they did not, lo! the manager,
+ actor and author of heroic tragedy were exceeding sorrowful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While sitting attendance on the epilogue Mr. Vane had nothing to distract
+ him from the congregation but a sanguinary sermon in five heads, so his
+ eyes roved over the pews, and presently he became aware of a familiar face
+ watching him closely. The gentleman to whom it belonged finding himself
+ recognized left his seat, and a minute later Sir Charles Pomander entered
+ Mr. Vane's box.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This Sir Charles Pomander was a gentleman of vice; pleasure he called it.
+ Mr. Vane had made his acquaintance two years ago in Shropshire. Sir
+ Charles, who husbanded everything except his soul, had turned himself out
+ to grass for a month. His object was, by roast mutton, bread with some
+ little flour in it, air, water, temperance, chastity and peace, to be
+ enabled to take a deeper plunge into impurities of food and morals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few nights ago, unseen by Mr. Vane, he had observed him in the theater;
+ an ordinary man would have gone at once and shaken hands with him, but
+ this was not an ordinary man, this was a diplomatist. First of all, he
+ said to himself: &ldquo;What is this man doing here?&rdquo; Then he soon discovered
+ this man must be in love with some actress; then it became his business to
+ know who she was; this, too, soon betrayed itself. Then it became more
+ than ever Sir Charles's business to know whether Mrs. Woffington returned
+ the sentiment; and here his penetration was at fault, for the moment; he
+ determined, however, to discover.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Vane then received his friend, all unsuspicious how that friend had
+ been skinning him with his eyes for some time past. After the usual
+ compliments had passed between two gentlemen who had been hand and glove
+ for a month and forgotten each other's existence for two years, Sir
+ Charles, still keeping in view his design, said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let us go upon the stage.&rdquo; The fourth act had just concluded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go upon the stage!&rdquo; said Mr. Vane; &ldquo;what, where she&mdash;I mean among
+ the actors?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; come into the green-room. There are one or two people of reputation
+ there; I will introduce you to them, if you please.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go upon the stage!&rdquo; why, if it had been proposed to him to go to heaven
+ he would not have been more astonished. He was too astonished at first to
+ realize the full beauty of the arrangement, by means of which he might be
+ within a yard of Mrs. Woffington, might feel her dress rustle past him,
+ might speak to her, might drink her voice fresh from her lips almost
+ before it mingled with meaner air. Silence gives consent, and Mr. Vane,
+ though he thought a great deal, said nothing; so Pomander rose, and they
+ left the boxes together. He led the way to the stage door, which was
+ opened obsequiously to him; they then passed through a dismal passage, and
+ suddenly emerged upon that scene of enchantment, the stage&mdash;a dirty
+ platform encumbered on all sides with piles of scenery in flats. They
+ threaded their way through rusty velvet actors and fustian carpenters, and
+ entered the green-room. At the door of this magic chamber Vane trembled
+ and half wished he could retire. They entered; his apprehension gave way
+ to disappointment, she was not there. Collecting himself, he was presently
+ introduced to a smart, jaunty, and, to do him justice, <i>distingue</i>
+ old beau. This was Colley Cibber, Esq., poet laureate, and retired actor
+ and dramatist, a gentleman who is entitled to a word or two.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This Cibber was the only actor since Shakespeare's time who had both acted
+ and written well. Pope's personal resentment misleads the reader of
+ English poetry as to Cibber's real place among the wits of the day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man's talent was dramatic, not didactic, or epic, or pastoral. Pope
+ was not so deep in the drama as in other matters, and Cibber was one of
+ its luminaries; he wrote some of the best comedies of his day. He also
+ succeeded where Dryden, for lack of true dramatic taste, failed. He
+ tampered successfully with Shakespeare. Colley Cibber's version of
+ &ldquo;Richard the Third&rdquo; is impudent and slightly larcenic, but it is
+ marvelously effective. It has stood a century, and probably will stand
+ forever; and the most admired passages in what literary humbugs who
+ pretend they know Shakespeare by the closet, not the stage, accept as
+ Shakespeare's &ldquo;Richard,&rdquo; are Cibber's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Cibber was now in private life, a mild edition of his own Lord
+ Foppington; he had none of the snob-fop as represented on our conventional
+ stage; nobody ever had, and lived. He was in tolerably good taste; but he
+ went ever gold-laced, highly powdered, scented, and diamonded, dispensing
+ graceful bows, praises of whoever had the good luck to be dead, and satire
+ of all who were here to enjoy it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Vane, to whom the drama had now become the golden branch of letters,
+ looked with some awe on this veteran, for he had seen many Woffingtons. He
+ fell soon upon the subject nearest his heart. He asked Mr. Cibber what he
+ thought of Mrs. Woffington. The old gentleman thought well of the young
+ lady's talent, especially her comedy; in tragedy, said he, she imitates
+ Mademoiselle Dumenil, of the Theatre Francais, and confounds the stage
+ rhetorician with the actress. The next question was not so fortunate. &ldquo;Did
+ you ever see so great and true an actress upon the whole?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Cibber opened his eyes, a slight flush came into his wash-leather
+ face, and he replied: &ldquo;I have not only seen many equal, many superior to
+ her, but I have seen some half dozen who would have eaten her up and spit
+ her out again, and not known they had done anything out of the way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Pomander soothed the veteran's dudgeon by explaining in dulcet tones
+ that his friend was not long from Shropshire, and&mdash;The critic
+ interrupted him, and bade him not dilute the excuse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Mr. Vane had as much to say as either of them, but he had not the
+ habit, which dramatic folks have, of carrying his whole bank in his
+ cheek-pocket, so they quenched him for two minutes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But lovers are not silenced, he soon returned to the attack; he dwelt on
+ the grace, the ease, the freshness, the intelligence, the universal beauty
+ of Mrs. Woffington. Pomander sneered, to draw him out. Cibber smiled, with
+ good-natured superiority. This nettled the young gentleman, he fired up,
+ his handsome countenance glowed, he turned Demosthenes for her he loved.
+ One advantage he had over both Cibber and Pomander, a fair stock of
+ classical learning; on this he now drew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Other actors and actresses,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;are monotonous in voice,
+ monotonous in action, but Mrs. Woffington's delivery has the compass and
+ variety of nature, and her movements are free from the stale uniformity
+ that distinguishes artifice from art. The others seem to me to have but
+ two dreams of grace, a sort of crawling on stilts is their motion, and an
+ angular stiffness their repose.&rdquo; He then cited the most famous statues of
+ antiquity, and quoted situations in plays where, by her fine dramatic
+ instinct, Mrs. Woffington, he said, threw her person into postures similar
+ to these, and of equal beauty; not that she strikes attitudes like the
+ rest, but she melts from one beautiful statue into another; and, if
+ sculptors could gather from her immortal graces, painters, too, might take
+ from her face the beauties that belong of right to passion and thought,
+ and orators might revive their withered art, and learn from those golden
+ lips the music of old Athens, that quelled tempestuous mobs, and princes
+ drunk with victory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Much as this was, he was going to say more, ever so much more, but he
+ became conscious of a singular sort of grin upon every face; this grin
+ made him turn rapidly round to look for its cause. It explained itself at
+ once; at his very elbow was a lady, whom his heart recognized, though her
+ back was turned to him. She was dressed in a rich silk gown, pearl white,
+ with flowers and sprigs embroidered; her beautiful white neck and arms
+ were bare. She was sweeping up the room with the epilogue in her hand,
+ learning it off by heart; at the other end of the room she turned, and now
+ she shone full upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It certainly was a dazzling creature. She had a head of beautiful form,
+ perched like a bird upon a throat massive yet shapely and smooth as a
+ column of alabaster, a symmetrical brow, black eyes full of fire and
+ tenderness, a delicious mouth, with a hundred varying expressions, and
+ that marvelous faculty of giving beauty alike to love or scorn, a sneer or
+ a smile. But she had one feature more remarkable than all, her eyebrows&mdash;the
+ actor's feature; they were jet black, strongly marked, and in repose were
+ arched like a rainbow; but it was their extraordinary flexibility which
+ made other faces upon the stage look sleepy beside Margaret Woffington's.
+ In person she was considerably above the middle height, and so finely
+ formed that one could not determine the exact character of her figure. At
+ one time it seemed all stateliness, at another time elegance personified,
+ and flowing voluptuousness at another. She was Juno, Psyche, Hebe, by
+ turns, and for aught we know at will.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must be confessed that a sort of halo of personal grandeur surrounds a
+ great actress. A scene is set; half a dozen nobodies are there lost in it,
+ because they are and seem lumps of nothing. The great artist steps upon
+ that scene, and how she fills it in a moment! Mind and majesty wait upon
+ her in the air; her person is lost in the greatness of her personal
+ presence; she dilates with <i>thought,</i> and a stupid giantess looks a
+ dwarf beside her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No wonder then that Mr. Vane felt overpowered by this torch in a closet.
+ To vary the metaphor, it seemed to him, as she swept up and down, as if
+ the green-room was a shell, and this glorious creature must burst it and
+ be free. Meantime, the others saw a pretty actress studying her business;
+ and Cibber saw a dramatic school-girl learning what he presumed to be a
+ very silly set of words. Sir C. Pomander's eye had been on her the moment
+ she entered, and he watched keenly the effect of Vane's eloquent eulogy;
+ but apparently the actress was too deep in her epilogue for anything else.
+ She came in, saying, &ldquo;Mum, mum, mum,&rdquo; over her task, and she went on doing
+ so. The experienced Mr. Cibber, who had divined Vane in an instant, drew
+ him into a corner, and complimented him on his well-timed eulogy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You acted that mighty well, sir,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Stop my vitals! if I did not
+ think you were in earnest, till I saw the jade had slipped in among us. It
+ told, sir&mdash;it told.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Up fired Vane. &ldquo;What do you mean, sir?&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Do you suppose my
+ admiration of that lady is feigned?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No need to speak so loud, sir,&rdquo; replied the old gentleman; &ldquo;she hears
+ you. These hussies have ears like hawks.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then dispensed a private wink and a public bow; with which he strolled
+ away from Mr. Vane, and walked feebly and jauntily up the room, whistling
+ &ldquo;Fair Hebe;&rdquo; fixing his eye upon the past, and somewhat ostentatiously
+ overlooking the existence of the present company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no great harm in an old gentleman whistling, but there are two
+ ways of doing it; and as this old beau did it, it seemed not unlike a
+ small cock-a-doodle-doo of general defiance; and the denizens of the
+ green-room, swelled now to a considerable number by the addition of all
+ the ladies and gentlemen who had been killed in the fourth act, or whom
+ the buttery-fingered author could not keep in hand until the fall of the
+ curtain, felt it as such; and so they were not sorry when Mrs. Woffington,
+ looking up from her epilogue, cast a glance upon the old beau, waited for
+ him, and walked parallel with him on the other side of the room, giving an
+ absurdly exact imitation of his carriage and deportment. To make this more
+ striking, she pulled out of her pocket, after a mock search, a huge paste
+ ring, gazed on it with a ludicrous affectation of simple wonder, stuck it,
+ like Cibber's diamond, on her little finger, and, pursing up her mouth,
+ proceeded to whistle a quick movement,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Which, by some devilish cantrip sleight,&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ played round the old beau's slow movement, without being at variance with
+ it. As for the character of this ladylike performance, it was clear,
+ brilliant, and loud as blacksmith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The folk laughed; Vane was shocked. &ldquo;She profanes herself by whistling,&rdquo;
+ thought he. Mr. Cibber was confounded. He appeared to have no idea whence
+ came this sparkling adagio. He looked round, placed his hands to his ears,
+ and left off whistling. So did his musical accomplice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gentlemen,&rdquo; said Cibber, with pathetic gravity, &ldquo;the wind howls most
+ dismally this evening! I took it for a drunken shoemaker!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this there was a roar of laughter, except from Mr. Vane. Peg Woffington
+ laughed as merrily as the others, and showed a set of teeth that were
+ really dazzling; but all in one moment, without the preliminaries an
+ ordinary countenance requires, this laughing Venus pulled a face gloomy
+ beyond conception. Down came her black brows straight as a line, and she
+ cast a look of bitter reproach on all present; resuming her study, as who
+ should say, &ldquo;Are ye not ashamed to divert a poor girl from her epilogue?&rdquo;
+ And then she went on, &ldquo;Mum! mum! mum!&rdquo; casting off ever and anon resentful
+ glances; and this made the fools laugh again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Laureate was now respectfully addressed by one of his admirers, James
+ Quin, the Falstaff of the day, and the rival at this time of Garrick in
+ tragic characters, though the general opinion was, that he could not long
+ maintain a standing against the younger genius and his rising school of
+ art.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Off the stage, James Quin was a character; his eccentricities were three&mdash;a
+ humorist, a glutton and an honest man; traits that often caused
+ astonishment and ridicule, especially the last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May we not hope for something from Mr. Cibber's pen after so long a
+ silence?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; was the considerate reply. &ldquo;Who have ye got to play it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Plenty,&rdquo; said Quin; &ldquo;there's your humble servant, there's&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Humility at the head of the list,&rdquo; cried she of the epilogue. &ldquo;Mum! mum!
+ mum!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vane thought this so sharp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Garrick, Barry, Macklin, Kitty Clive here at my side, Mrs. Cibber, the
+ best tragic actress I ever saw; and Woffington, who is as good a comedian
+ as you ever saw, sir;&rdquo; and Quin turned as red as fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Keep your temper, Jemmy,&rdquo; said Mrs. Woffington with a severe accent.
+ &ldquo;Mum! mum! mum!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You misunderstand my question,&rdquo; replied Cibber, calmly; &ldquo;I know your <i>dramatis
+ personae</i> but where the devil are your actors?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here was a blow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The public,&rdquo; said Quin, in some agitation, &ldquo;would snore if we acted as
+ they did in your time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How do you know that, sir?&rdquo; was the supercilious rejoinder; <i>&ldquo;you never
+ tried!&rdquo;</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Quin was silenced. Peg Woffington looked off her epilogue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bad as we are,&rdquo; said she coolly, &ldquo;we might be worse.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Cibber turned round, slightly raised his eyebrows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed!&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Madam!&rdquo; added he, with a courteous smile, &ldquo;will you be
+ kind enough to explain to me how you could be worse!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If, like a crab, we could go backward!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this the auditors tittered; and Mr. Cibber had recourse to his
+ spy-glass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This gentleman was satirical or insolent, as the case might demand, in
+ three degrees, of which the snuff-box was the comparative, and the
+ spy-glass the superlative. He had learned this on the stage; in
+ annihilating Quin he had just used the snuff weapon, and now he drew his
+ spy-glass upon poor Peggy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whom have we here?&rdquo; said he. Then he looked with his spy-glass to see.
+ &ldquo;Oh, the little Irish orange-girl!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whose basket outweighed Colley Cibber's salary for the first twenty years
+ of his dramatic career,&rdquo; was the delicate reply to the above delicate
+ remark. It staggered him for a moment; however, he affected a most puzzled
+ air, then gradually allowed a light to steal into his features.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eh! ah! oh! how stupid I am; I understand; you sold something besides
+ oranges!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; said Mr. Vane, and colored up to the temples, and cast a look on
+ Cibber, as much as to say, &ldquo;If you were not seventy-three!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His ejaculation was something so different from any tone any other person
+ there present could have uttered that the actress's eye dwelt on him for a
+ single moment, and in that moment he felt himself looked through and
+ through.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I sold the young fops a bargain, you mean,&rdquo; was her calm reply; &ldquo;and now
+ I am come down to the old ones. A truce, Mr. Cibber, what do you
+ understand by an actor? Tell me; for I am foolish enough to respect your
+ opinion on these matters!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An actor, young lady,&rdquo; said he, gravely, &ldquo;is an artist who has gone deep
+ enough in his art to make dunces, critics and greenhorns take it for
+ nature; moreover, he really personates; which your mere <i>man of the
+ stage</i> never does. He has learned the true art of self-multiplication.
+ He drops Betterton, Booth, Wilkes, or, ahem&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cibber,&rdquo; inserted Sir Charles Pomander. Cibber bowed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In his dressing-room, and comes out young or old, a fop, a valet, a
+ lover, or a hero, with voice, mien, and every gesture to match. A grain
+ less than this may be good speaking, fine preaching, deep grunting, high
+ ranting, eloquent reciting; but I'll be hanged if it is acting!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then Colley Cibber never acted,&rdquo; whispered Quin to Mrs. Clive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then Margaret Woffington is an actress,&rdquo; said M. W.; &ldquo;the fine ladies
+ take my Lady Betty for their sister. In Mrs. Day, I pass for a woman of
+ seventy; and in Sir Harry Wildair I have been taken for a man. I would
+ have told you that before, but I didn't know it was to my credit,&rdquo; said
+ she, slyly, &ldquo;till Mr. Cibber laid down the law.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Proof!&rdquo; said Cibber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A warm letter from one lady, diamond buckles from another, and an offer
+ of her hand and fortune from a third; <i>rien que cela.&rdquo;</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Cibber conveyed behind her back a look of absolute incredulity; she
+ divined it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will not show you the letters,&rdquo; continued she, &ldquo;because Sir Harry,
+ though a rake, was a gentleman; but here are the buckles;&rdquo; and she fished
+ them out of her pocket, capacious of such things. The buckles were gravely
+ inspected, they made more than one eye water, they were undeniable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, let us see what we can do for her,&rdquo; said the Laureate. He tapped
+ his box and without a moment's hesitation produced the most execrable
+ distich in the language:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Now who is like Peggy, with talent at will,
+ A maid loved her Harry, for want of a Bill?
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, child,&rdquo; continued he, after the applause which follows extemporary
+ verses had subsided, &ldquo;take <i>me</i> in. Play something to make me lose
+ sight of saucy Peg Woffington, and I'll give the world five acts more
+ before the curtain falls on Colley Cibber.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you could be deceived,&rdquo; put in Mr. Vane, somewhat timidly; &ldquo;I think
+ there is no disguise through which grace and beauty such as Mrs.
+ Woffington's would not shine, to my eyes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is to praise my person at the expense of my wit, sir, is it not?&rdquo;
+ was her reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the first word she had ever addressed to him. The tones appeared
+ so sweet to him that he could not find anything to reply for listening to
+ them; and Cibber resumed:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Meantime, I will show you a real actress; she is coming here to-night to
+ meet me. Did ever you children hear of Ann Bracegirdle?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bracegirdle!&rdquo; said Mrs. Clive; &ldquo;why, she has been dead this thirty years;
+ at least I thought so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dead to the stage. There is more heat in her ashes than in your fire,
+ Kate Clive! Ah! here comes her messenger,&rdquo; continued he, as an ancient man
+ appeared with a letter in his hand. This letter Mrs. Woffington snatched
+ and read, and at the same instant in bounced the call-boy. &ldquo;Epilogue
+ called,&rdquo; said this urchin, in the tone of command which these small fry of
+ Parnassus adopt; and, obedient to his high behest, Mrs. Woffington moved
+ to the door, with the Bracegirdle missive in her hand, but not before she
+ had delivered its general contents: &ldquo;The great actress will be here in a
+ few minutes,&rdquo; said she, and she glided swiftly out of the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ PEOPLE whose mind or manners possess any feature, and are not as devoid of
+ all eccentricity as half pounds of butter bought of metropolitan grocers,
+ are recommended not to leave a roomful of their acquaintances until the
+ last but one. Yes, they should always be penultimate. Perhaps Mrs.
+ Woffington knew this; but epilogues are stubborn things, and call-boys
+ undeniable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you ever hear a woman whistle before?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never; but I saw one sit astride on an ass in Germany!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The saddle was not on her husband, I hope, madam?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, sir; the husband walked by his kinsfolk's side, and made the best of
+ a bad bargain, as Peggy's husband will have to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wait till some one ventures on the gay Lotharia&mdash;<i>illi aes
+ triplex;</i> that means he must have triple brass, Kitty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I deny that, sir; since his wife will always have enough for both.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have not observed the lady's brass,&rdquo; said Vane, trembling with passion;
+ &ldquo;but I observed her talent, and I noticed that whoever attacks her to her
+ face comes badly off.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well said, sir,&rdquo; answered Quin; &ldquo;and I wish Kitty here would tell us why
+ she hates Mrs. Woffington, the best-natured woman in the theater?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't hate her, I don't trouble my head about her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, you hate her; for you never miss a cut at her!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you hate a haunch of venison, Quin?&rdquo; said the lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, you little unnatural monster,&rdquo; replied Quin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For all that, you never miss a cut at one, so hold your tongue!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Le beau raisonnement!&rdquo; said Mr. Cibber. &ldquo;James Quin, don't interfere with
+ nature's laws; let our ladies hate one another, it eases their minds; try
+ to make them Christians, and you will not convert their tempers, but spoil
+ your own. Peggy there hates George Anne Bellamy, because she has gaudy
+ silk dresses from Paris, by paying for them, as <i>she</i> could, if not
+ too stingy. Kitty here hates Peggy because Rich has breeched her, whereas
+ Kitty, who now sets up for a prude, wanted to put delicacy off and
+ small-clothes on in Peg's stead, that is where the Kate and Peg shoe
+ pinches, near the femoral artery, James.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Shrimps have the souls of shrimps,&rdquo; resumed this <i>censor castigatorque
+ minorum.</i> &ldquo;Listen to me, and learn that really great actors are great
+ in soul, and do not blubber like a great school-girl because Anne Bellamy
+ has two yellow silk dresses from Paris, as I saw Woffington blubber in
+ this room, and would not be comforted; nor fume like Kitty Clive, because
+ Woffington has a pair of breeches and a little boy's rapier to go a
+ playing at acting with. When I was young, two giantesses fought for empire
+ upon this very stage, where now dwarfs crack and bounce like parched peas.
+ They played Roxana and Statira in the 'Rival Queens.' Rival queens of art
+ themselves, they put out all their strength. In the middle of the last act
+ the town gave judgment in favor of Statira. What did Roxana? Did she spill
+ grease on Statira's robe, as Peg Woffington would? or stab her, as I
+ believe Kitty here capable of doing? No! Statira was never so tenderly
+ killed as that night; she owned this to me. Roxana bade the theater
+ farewell that night, and wrote to Statira thus: I give you word for word:
+ 'Madam, the best judge we have has decided in your favor. I shall never
+ play second on a stage where I have been first so long, but I shall often
+ be a spectator, and methinks none will appreciate your talent more than I,
+ who have felt its weight. My wardrobe, one of the best in Europe, is of no
+ use to me; if you will honor me by selecting a few of my dresses, you will
+ gratify me, and I shall fancy I see myself upon the stage to greater
+ advantage than before.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what did Statira answer, sir?&rdquo; said Mr. Vane, eagerly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She answered thus: 'Madam, the town has often been wrong, and may have
+ been so last night, in supposing that I vied successfully with your merit;
+ but this much is certain&mdash;and here, madam, I am the best judge&mdash;that
+ off the stage you have just conquered me. I shall wear with pride any
+ dress you have honored, and shall feel inspired to great exertions by your
+ presence among our spectators, unless, indeed, the sense of your
+ magnanimity and the recollection of your talent should damp me by the
+ dread of losing any portion of your good opinion.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What a couple of stiff old things,&rdquo; said Mrs. Clive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, madam, say not so,&rdquo; cried Vane, warmly; &ldquo;surely, this was the lofty
+ courtesy of two great minds not to be overbalanced by strife, defeat, or
+ victory.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What were their names, sir?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Statira was the great Mrs. Oldfield. Roxana you will see here to-night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This caused a sensation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Colley's reminiscences were interrupted by loud applause from the theater;
+ the present seldom gives the past a long hearing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old war-horse cocked his ears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is Woffington speaking the epilogue,&rdquo; said Quin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, she has got the length of their foot, somehow,&rdquo; said a small actress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And the breadth of their hands, too,&rdquo; said Pomander, waking from a nap.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is the depth of their hearts she has sounded,&rdquo; said Vane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In those days, if a metaphor started up, the poor thing was coursed up
+ hill and down dale, and torn limb from jacket; even in Parliament, a trope
+ was sometimes hunted from one session into another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You were asking me about Mrs. Oldfield, sir,&rdquo; resumed Cibber, rather
+ peevishly. &ldquo;I will own to you, I lack words to convey a just idea of her
+ double and complete supremacy. But the comedians of this day are
+ weak-strained <i>farceurs</i> compared with her, and her tragic tone was
+ thunder set to music.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I saw a brigadier-general cry like a child at her Indiana; I have seen
+ her crying with pain herself at the wing (for she was always a great
+ sufferer), I have seen her then spring upon the stage as Lady Townley, and
+ in a moment sorrow brightened into joy: the air seemed to fill with
+ singing-birds, that chirped the pleasures of fashion, love and youth in
+ notes sparkling like diamonds and stars and prisms. She was above
+ criticism, out of its scope, as is the blue sky; men went not to judge
+ her, they drank her, and gazed at her, and were warmed at her, and
+ refreshed by her. The fops were awed into silence, and with their humbler
+ betters thanked Heaven for her, if they thanked it for anything.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In all the crowded theater, care and pain and poverty were banished from
+ the memory, while Oldfield's face spoke, and her tongue flashed melodies;
+ the lawyer forgot his quillets; the polemic, the mote in his brother's
+ eye; the old maid, her grudge against the two sexes; the old man, his gray
+ hairs and his lost hours. And can it be, that all this which should have
+ been immortal, is quite&mdash;quite lost, is as though it had never been?&rdquo;
+ he sighed. &ldquo;Can it be that its fame is now sustained by me; who twang with
+ my poor lute, cracked and old, these feeble praises of a broken lyre:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 'Whose wires were golden and its heavenly air
+ More tunable than lark to shepherd's ear,
+ When wheat is green, when hawthorn buds appear.'&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ He paused, and his eye looked back over many years. Then, with a very
+ different tone, he added:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And that Jack Falstaff there must have seen her, now I think on't.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Only once, sir,&rdquo; said Quin, &ldquo;and I was but ten years old.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He saw her once, and he was ten years old; yet he calls Woffington a
+ great comedian, and my son The's wife, with her hatchet face, the greatest
+ tragedian he ever saw! Jemmy, what an ass you must be!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mrs. Cibber always makes me cry, and t'other always makes me laugh,&rdquo; said
+ Quin, stoutly, &ldquo;that's why.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Ce beau raisonnement</i> met no answer, but a look of sovereign
+ contempt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A very trifling incident saved the ladies of the British stage from
+ further criticism. There were two candles in this room, one on each side;
+ the call-boy had entered, and, poking about for something, knocked down
+ and broke one of these.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Awkward imp!&rdquo; cried a velvet page.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll go <i>to the Treasury</i> for another, ma'am,&rdquo; said the boy pertly,
+ and vanished with the fractured wax.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I take advantage of the interruption to open Mr. Vane's mind to the
+ reader. First he had been astonished at the freedom of sarcasm these
+ people indulged in without quarreling; next at the non-respect of sex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So sex is not recognized in this community,&rdquo; thought he. Then the
+ glibness and merit of some of their answers surprised and amused him. He,
+ like me, had seldom met an imaginative repartee, except in a play or a
+ book. &ldquo;Society's&rdquo; repartees were then, as they are now, the good old tree
+ in various dresses and veils: <i>Tu quoque, tu mentiris, vos damnemini;</i>
+ but he was sick and dispirited on the whole; such very bright illusions
+ had been dimmed in these few minutes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was brilliant; but her manners, if not masculine, were very daring;
+ and yet when she spoke to him, a stranger, how sweet and gentle her voice
+ was! Then it was clear nothing but his ignorance could have placed her at
+ the summit of her art.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still he clung to his enthusiasm for her. He drew Pomander aside. &ldquo;What a
+ simplicity there is in Mrs. Woffington!&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;the rest, male and
+ female, are all so affected; she is so fresh and natural. They are all
+ hot-house plants; she is a cowslip with the May dew on it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What you take for simplicity is her refined art,&rdquo; replied Sir Charles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No!&rdquo; said Vane, &ldquo;I never saw a more innocent creature!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pomander laughed in his face; this laugh disconcerted him more than words;
+ he spoke no more&mdash;he sat pensive. He was sorry he had come to this
+ place, where everybody knew his goddess; yet nobody admired, nobody loved,
+ and, alas! nobody respected her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was roused from his reverie by a noise; the noise was caused by Cibber
+ falling on Garrick, whom Pomander had maliciously quoted against all the
+ tragedians of Colley Cibber's day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I tell you,&rdquo; cried the veteran, &ldquo;that this Garrick has banished dignity
+ from the stage and given us in exchange what you and he take for fire; but
+ it is smoke and vapor. His manner is little, like his person, it is all
+ fuss and bustle. This is his idea of a tragic scene: A little fellow comes
+ bustling in, goes bustling about, and runs bustling out.&rdquo; Here Mr. Cibber
+ left the room, to give greater effect to his description, but presently
+ returned in a mighty pother, saying: &ldquo;'Give me another horse!' Well,
+ where's the horse? don't you see I'm waiting for him? 'Bind up my wounds!'
+ Look sharp now with these wounds. 'Have mercy, Heaven!' but be quick about
+ it, for the pit can't wait for Heaven. Bustle! bustle! bustle!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old dog was so irresistibly funny that the whole company were obliged
+ to laugh; but in the midst of their merriment Mrs. Woffington's voice was
+ heard at the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This way, madam.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A clear and somewhat shrill voice replied: &ldquo;I know the way better than
+ you, child;&rdquo; and a stately old lady appeared on the threshold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bracegirdle,&rdquo; said Mr. Cibber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may well be supposed that every eye was turned on this newcomer&mdash;that
+ Roxana for whom Mr. Cibber's story had prepared a peculiar interest. She
+ was dressed in a rich green velvet gown with gold fringe. Cibber
+ remembered it; she had played the &ldquo;Eastern Queen&rdquo; in it. Heaven forgive
+ all concerned! It was fearfully pinched in at the waist and ribs, so as to
+ give the idea of wood inside, not woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her hair and eyebrows were iron-gray, and she had lost a front tooth, or
+ she would still have been eminently handsome. She was tall and straight as
+ a dart, and her noble port betrayed none of the weakness of age, only it
+ was to be seen that her hands were a little weak, and the gold-headed
+ crutch struck the ground rather sharply, as if it did a little
+ limbs'-duty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the lady who marched into the middle of the room, with a &ldquo;How do,
+ Colley?&rdquo; and, looking over the company's heads as if she did not see them,
+ regarded the four walls with some interest. Like a cat, she seemed to
+ think more of places than of folk. The page obsequiously offered her a
+ chair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so clean as it used to be,&rdquo; said Mrs. Bracegirdle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately, in making this remark, the old lady graciously patted the
+ page's head for offering her the chair; and this action gave, with some of
+ the ill-constituted minds that are ever on the titter, a ridiculous
+ direction to a remark intended, I believe, for the paint and wanscots,
+ etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing is as it used to be,&rdquo; remarked Mr. Cibber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All the better for everything,&rdquo; said Mrs. Clive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We were laughing at this mighty little David, first actor of this mighty
+ little age.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now if Mr. Cibber thought to find in the newcomer an ally of the past in
+ its indiscriminate attack upon the present, he was much mistaken; for the
+ old actress made onslaught on this nonsense at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, ay,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;and not the first time by many hundreds. 'Tis a
+ disease you have. Cure yourself, Colley. Davy Garrick pleases the public;
+ and in trifles like acting, that take nobody to heaven, to please all the
+ world, is to be great. Some pretend to higher aims, but none have 'em. You
+ may hide this from young fools, mayhap, but not from an old 'oman like me.
+ He! he! he! No, no, no&mdash;not from an old 'oman like me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She then turned round in her chair, and with that sudden, unaccountable
+ snappishness of tone to which the brisk old are subject, she snarled: &ldquo;Gie
+ me a pinch of snuff, some of ye, do!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tobacco dust was instantly at her disposal. She took it with the points of
+ her fingers delicately, and divested the crime of half its uncleanness and
+ vulgarity&mdash;more an angel couldn't.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Monstrous sensible woman, though!&rdquo; whispered Quin to Clive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hey, sir! what do you say, sir? for I'm a little deaf.&rdquo; (Not very to
+ praise, it seems.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That your judgment, madam, is equal to the reputation of your talent.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The words were hardly spoken before the old lady rose upright as a tower.
+ She then made an oblique preliminary sweep, and came down with such a
+ courtesy as the young had never seen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ James Quin, not to disgrace his generation, attempted a corresponding bow,
+ for which his figure and apoplectic tendency rendered him unfit; and while
+ he was transacting it, the graceful Cibber stepped gravely up, and looked
+ down and up the process with his glass, like a naturalist inspecting some
+ strange capriccio of an orang-outang. The gymnastics of courtesy ended
+ without back-falls&mdash;Cibber lowered his tone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are right, Bracy. It is nonsense denying the young fellow's talent;
+ but his Othello, now, Bracy! be just&mdash;his Othello!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, dear! oh, dear!&rdquo; cried she; &ldquo;I thought it was Desdemona's little
+ black boy come in without the tea-kettle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quin laughed uproariously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It made me laugh a deal more than Mr. Quin's Falstaff. Oh, dear! oh,
+ dear!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Falstaff, indeed! Snuff!&rdquo; In the tone of a trumpet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quin secretly revoked his good opinion of this woman's sense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Madam,&rdquo; said the page, timidly, &ldquo;if you would but favor us with a
+ specimen of the old style&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, child, why not? Only what makes you mumble like that? but they all
+ do it now, I see. Bless my soul! our words used to come out like
+ brandy-cherries; but now a sentence is like raspberry-jam, on the stage
+ and off.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cibber chuckled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And why don't you men carry yourself like Cibber here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't press that question,&rdquo; said Colley dryly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A monstrous poor actor, though,&rdquo; said the merciless old woman, in a mock
+ aside to the others; &ldquo;only twenty shillings a week for half his life;&rdquo; and
+ her shoulders went up to her ears&mdash;then she fell into a half reverie.
+ &ldquo;Yes, we were distinct,&rdquo; said she; &ldquo;but I must own, children, we were
+ slow. Once, in the midst of a beautiful tirade, my lover went to sleep,
+ and fell against me. A mighty pretty epigram, twenty lines, was writ on't
+ by one of my gallants. Have ye as many of them as we used?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In that respect,&rdquo; said the page, &ldquo;we are not behind our
+ great-grandmothers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I call that pert,&rdquo; said Mrs. Bracegirdle, with the air of one drawing
+ scientific distinctions. &ldquo;Now, is that a boy or a lady that spoke to me
+ last?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By its dress, I should say a boy,&rdquo; said Cibber, with his glass; &ldquo;by its
+ assurance, a lady!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There's one clever woman among ye; Peg something, plays Lothario, Lady
+ Betty Modish, and what not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! admire Woffington?&rdquo; screamed Mrs. Clive; &ldquo;why, she is the greatest
+ gabbler on the stage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't care,&rdquo; was the reply, &ldquo;there's nature about the jade. Don't
+ contradict me,&rdquo; added she, with sudden fury; &ldquo;a parcel of children.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, madam,&rdquo; said Clive humbly. &ldquo;Mr. Cibber, will you try and prevail on
+ Mrs. Bracegirdle to favor us with a recitation?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cibber handed his cane with pomp to a small actor. Bracegirdle did the
+ same; and, striking the attitudes that had passed for heroic in their day,
+ they declaimed out of the &ldquo;Rival Queens&rdquo; two or three tirades, which I
+ graciously spare the reader of this tale. Their elocution was neat and
+ silvery; but not one bit like the way people speak in streets, palaces,
+ fields, roads and rooms. They had not made the grand discovery, which Mr.
+ A. Wigan on the stage, and every man of sense off it, has made in our day
+ and nation; namely, that the stage is a representation, not of stage, but
+ of life; and that an actor ought to speak and act in imitation of human
+ beings, not of speaking machines that have run and creaked in a stage
+ groove, with their eyes shut upon the world at large, upon nature, upon
+ truth, upon man, upon woman and upon child.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is slow,&rdquo; cried Cibber; &ldquo;let us show these young people how ladies
+ and gentlemen moved fifty years ago, <i>dansons.&rdquo;</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A fiddler was caught, a beautiful slow minuet played, and a bit of &ldquo;solemn
+ dancing&rdquo; done. Certainly it was not gay, but it must be owned it was
+ beautiful; it was the dance of kings, the poetry of the courtly saloon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The retired actress, however, had frisker notions left in her. &ldquo;This is
+ slow,&rdquo; cried she, and bade the fiddler play, &ldquo;The wind that shakes the
+ barley,&rdquo; an ancient jig tune; this she danced to in a style that utterly
+ astounded the spectators.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She showed them what fun was; her feet and her stick were all echoes to
+ the mad strain; out went her heel behind, and, returning, drove her four
+ yards forward. She made unaccountable slants, and cut them all over in
+ turn if they did not jump for it. Roars of inextinguishable laughter
+ arose, it would have made an oyster merry. Suddenly she stopped, and put
+ her hands to her sides, and soon after she gave a vehement cry of pain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The laughter ceased.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She gave another cry of such agony that they were all round her in a
+ moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, help me, ladies,&rdquo; screamed the poor woman, in tones as feminine as
+ they were heart-rending and piteous. &ldquo;Oh, my back! my loins! I suffer,
+ gentlemen,&rdquo; said the poor thing, faintly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What was to be done? Mr. Vane offered his penknife to cut her laces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You shall cut my head off sooner,&rdquo; cried she, with sudden energy. &ldquo;Don't
+ pity me,&rdquo; said she, sadly, &ldquo;I don't deserve it;&rdquo; then, lifting her eyes,
+ she exclaimed, with a sad air of self-reproach: &ldquo;O vanity! do you never
+ leave a woman?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, madam!&rdquo; whimpered the page, who was a good-hearted girl; &ldquo;'twas your
+ great complaisance for us, not vanity. Oh! oh! oh!&rdquo; and she began to
+ blubber, to make matters better.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, my children,&rdquo; said the old lady, &ldquo;'twas vanity. I wanted to show you
+ what an old 'oman could do; and I have humiliated myself, trying to
+ outshine younger folk. I am justly humiliated, as you see;&rdquo; and she began
+ to cry a little.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is very painful,&rdquo; said Cibber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bracegirdle now raised her eyes (they had set her in a chair), and
+ looking sweetly, tenderly and earnestly on her old companion, she said to
+ him, slowly, gently, but impressively &ldquo;Colley, at threescore years and ten
+ this was ill done of us! You and I are here now&mdash;for what? to cheer
+ the young up the hill we mounted years ago. And, old friend, if we detract
+ from them we discourage them. A great sin in the old!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Every dog his day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We have had ours.&rdquo; Here she smiled, then, laying her hand tenderly in the
+ old man's, she added, with calm solemnity: &ldquo;And now we must go quietly
+ toward our rest, and strut and fret no more the few last minutes of life's
+ fleeting hour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How tame my cacotype of these words compared with what they were. I am
+ ashamed of them and myself, and the human craft of writing, which, though
+ commoner far, is so miserably behind the godlike art of speech: <i>&ldquo;Si
+ ipsam audivisses!&rdquo;</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These ink scratches, which, in the imperfection of language, we have
+ called words, till the unthinking actually dream they are words, but which
+ are the shadows of the corpses of words; these word-shadows then were
+ living powers on her lips, and subdued, as eloquence always does, every
+ heart within reach of the imperial tongue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young loved her, and the old man, softened and vanquished, and mindful
+ of his failing life, was silent, and pressed his handkerchief to his eyes
+ a moment; then he said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, Bracy, no. Be composed, I pray you. She is right. Young people,
+ forgive me that I love the dead too well, and the days when I was what you
+ are now. Drat the woman,&rdquo; continued he, half ashamed of his emotion; &ldquo;she
+ makes us laugh, and makes us cry, just as she used.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What does he say, young woman?&rdquo; said the old lady, dryly, to Mrs. Clive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He says you make us laugh, and make us cry, madam; and so you do me, I'm
+ sure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And that's Peg Woffington's notion of an actress! Better it, Cibber and
+ Bracegirdle, if you can,&rdquo; said the other, rising up like lightning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She then threw Colley Cibber a note, and walked coolly and rapidly out of
+ the room, without looking once behind her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rest stood transfixed, looking at one another, and at the empty chair.
+ Then Cibber opened and read the note aloud. It was from Mrs. Bracegirdle:
+ &ldquo;Playing at tric-trac; so can't play the fool in your green-room to-night.
+ B.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On this, a musical ringing laugh was heard from outside the door, where
+ the pseudo Bracegirdle was washing the gray from her hair, and the
+ wrinkles from her face&mdash;ah! I wish I could do it as easily!&mdash;and
+ the little bit of sticking-plaster from her front tooth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, it is the Irish jade!&rdquo; roared Cibber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Divil a less!&rdquo; rang back a rich brogue; &ldquo;and it's not the furst time we
+ put the comether upon ye, England, my jewal!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One more mutual glance, and then the mortal cleverness of all this began
+ to dawn on their minds; and they broke forth into clapping of hands, and
+ gave this accomplished <i>mime</i> three rounds of applause; Mr. Vane and
+ Sir Charles Pomander leading with, &ldquo;Bravo, Woffington!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Its effect on Mr. Vane may be imagined. Who but she could have done this?
+ This was as if a painter should so paint a man as to deceive his species.
+ This was acting, but not like the acting of the stage. He was in
+ transports, and self-satisfaction at his own judgment mingled pleasantly
+ with his admiration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this cheerful exhibition, one joined not&mdash;Mr. Cibber. His theories
+ had received a shock (and we all love our theories). He himself had
+ received a rap&mdash;and we don't hate ourselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Great is the syllogism! But there is a class of arguments less vulnerable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If A says to B, &ldquo;You can't hit me, as I prove by this syllogism&rdquo; (here
+ followeth the syllogism), &ldquo;and B, <i>pour toute reponse,</i> knocks A down
+ such a whack that he rebounds into a sitting posture; and to him the man,
+ the tree, the lamp-post and the fire-escape become not clearly
+ distinguishable; this barbarous logic prevails against the logic in
+ Barbara, and the syllogism is in the predicament of Humpty Dumpty. In this
+ predicament was the Poet Laureate. The miscreant Proteus (could not)
+ escape these chains!&rdquo; So the miscreant Proteus&mdash;no bad name for an
+ old actor&mdash;took his little cocked hat and marched, a smaller, if not
+ a wiser man. Some disjointed words fell from him: &ldquo;Mimicry is not acting,&rdquo;
+ etc.; and with one bitter, mowing glance at the applauders, <i>circumferens
+ acriter oculos,</i> he vanished in the largest pinch of snuff on record.
+ The rest dispersed more slowly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Vane waited eagerly, and watched the door for Mrs. Woffington; but she
+ did not come. He then made acquaintance with good-natured Mr. Quin, who
+ took him upon the stage and showed him by what vulgar appliances that
+ majestic rise of the curtain he so admired was effected. Returning to the
+ green-room for his friend, he found him in animated conversation with Mrs.
+ Woffington. This made Vane uneasy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles, up to the present moment of the evening, had been unwontedly
+ silent, and now he was talking nineteen to the dozen, and Mrs. Woffington
+ was listening with an appearance of interest that sent a pang to poor
+ Vane's heart; he begged Mr. Quin to introduce him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Quin introduced him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lady received his advances with polite composure. Mr. Vane stammered
+ his admiration of her Bracegirdle; but all he could find words to say was
+ mere general praise, and somewhat coldly received. Sir Charles, on the
+ contrary, spoke more like a critic. &ldquo;Had you given us the stage cackle, or
+ any of those traditionary symptoms of old age, we should have instantly
+ detected you,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;but this was art copying nature, and it may be
+ years before such a triumph of illusion is again effected under so many
+ adverse circumstances.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are very good, Sir Charles,&rdquo; was the reply. &ldquo;You flatter me. It was
+ one of those things which look greater than they are. Nobody here knew
+ Bracegirdle but Mr. Cibber; Mr. Cibber cannot see well without his
+ glasses, and I got rid of one of the candles; I sent one of the imps of
+ the theater to knock it down. I know Mrs. Bracegirdle by heart. I drink
+ tea with her every Sunday. I had her dress on, and I gave the old boy her
+ words and her way of thinking; it was mere mimicry; it was nothing
+ compared with what I once did; but, a-hem!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pray tell us!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am afraid I shall shock your friend. I see he is not a wicked man like
+ you, and perhaps does not know what good-for-nothing creatures actresses
+ are.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is not so ignorant as he looks,&rdquo; replied Sir Charles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is not quite the answer I expected, Sir Charles,&rdquo; replied this
+ lively lady; &ldquo;but it serves me right for fishing on dry land. Well, then,
+ you must know a young gentleman courted me. I forget whether I liked him
+ or not; but you will fancy I hated him, for I promised to marry him. You
+ must understand, gentlemen, that I was sent into the world, not to act,
+ which I abominate, but to chronicle small beer and teach an army of little
+ brats their letters; so this word 'wife,' and that word 'chimney-corner,'
+ took possession of my mind, and a vision of darning stockings for a large
+ party, all my own, filled my heart, and really I felt quite grateful to
+ the little brute that was to give me all this, and he would have had such
+ a wife as men never do have, still less deserve. But one fine day that the
+ theater left me time to examine his manner toward me, I instantly
+ discovered he was deceiving me. So I had him watched, and the little brute
+ was going to marry another woman, and break it to me by degrees afterward,
+ etc. You know, Sir Charles? Ah! I see you do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I found her out; got an introduction to her father; went down to his
+ house three days before the marriage, with a little coalblack mustache,
+ regimentals, and what not; made up, in short, with the art of my sex,
+ gentlemen&mdash;and the impudence of yours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The first day I flirted and danced with the bride. The second I made love
+ to her, and at night I let her know that her intended was a villain. I
+ showed her letters of his; protestations, oaths of eternal fidelity to one
+ Peg Woffington, 'who will die,' drawled I,' if he betrays her.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And here, gentlemen, mark the justice of Heaven. I received a backhanded
+ slap: 'Peg Woffington! an actress! Oh, the villain!' cried she; 'let him
+ marry the little vagabond. How dare he insult me with his hand that had
+ been offered in such a quarter?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So, in a fit of virtuous indignation, the little hypocrite dismissed the
+ little brute; in other words, she had fallen in love with me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have not had many happy hours, but I remember it was delicious to look
+ out of my window, and at the same moment smell the honeysuckles and see my
+ <i>perfide</i> dismissed under a heap of scorn and a pile of luggage he
+ had brought down for his wedding tour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I scampered up to London, laughing all the way; and when I got home, if I
+ remember right, I cried for two hours. How do you account for that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hope, madam,&rdquo; said Vane, gravely, &ldquo;it was remorse for having trifled
+ with that poor young lady's heart; she had never injured you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, sir, the husband I robbed her of was a brute and a villain in his
+ little way, and wicked and good-for-nothing, etc. He would have deceived
+ that poor little hypocrite, as he had this one,&rdquo; pointing to herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is not what I mean; you inspired her with an attachment, never to be
+ forgotten. Poor lady, how many sleepless nights has she passed since then,
+ how many times has she strained her eyes to see her angel lover returning
+ to her! She will not forget in two years the love it cost you but two days
+ to inspire. The powerful should be merciful. Ah! I fear you have no
+ heart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These words had no sooner burst from Mr. Vane, than he was conscious of
+ the strange liberty he had taken, and, indeed, the bad taste he had been
+ guilty of; and this feeling was not lessened when he saw Mrs. Woffington
+ color up to the temples. Her eyes, too, glittered like basilisks; but she
+ said nothing, which was remarkable in her, whose tongue was the sword of a
+ <i>maitre d'armes.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles eyed his friend in a sly, satirical manner; he then said,
+ laughingly: &ldquo;In two months <i>she married a third!</i> don't waste your
+ sympathy,&rdquo; and turned the talk into another channel; and soon after, Mrs.
+ Woffington's maid appearing at the door, she courtesied to both gentlemen
+ and left the theater. Sir Charles Pomander accompanied Mr. Vane a little
+ way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What becomes of her innocence?&rdquo; was his first word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One loses sight of it in her immense talent,&rdquo; said the lover.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She certainly is clever in all that bears upon her business,&rdquo; was the
+ reply; &ldquo;but I noticed you were a little shocked with her indelicacy in
+ telling us that story, and still more in having it to tell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indelicacy? No!&rdquo; said Vane; &ldquo;the little brute deserved it. Good Heavens!
+ to think that 'a little brute' might have married that angel, and actually
+ broke faith to lose her; it is incredible, the crime is diluted by the
+ absurdity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you heard him tell the story? No? Then take my word for it, you have
+ not heard the facts of the case.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! you are prejudiced against her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On the contrary, I like her. But I know that with all women the present
+ lover is an angel and the past a demon, and so on in turn. And I know that
+ if Satan were to enter the women of the stage, with the wild idea of
+ impairing their veracity, he would come out of their minds a greater liar
+ than he went in, and the innocent darlings would never know their
+ spiritual father had been at them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Doubtful whether this sentiment and period could be improved, Sir Charles
+ parted with his friend, leaving his sting in him like a friend; the
+ other's reflections as he sauntered home were not strictly those of a
+ wise, well-balanced mind; they ran in this style:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When she said, 'Is not that to praise my person at the expense of my
+ wit?' I ought to have said, 'Nay, madam; could your wit disguise your
+ person, it would betray itself, so you would still shine confessed;' and
+ instead of that I said nothing!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then ran over in his mind all the opportunities he had had for putting
+ in something smart, and bitterly regretted those lost opportunities; and
+ made the smart things, and beat the air with them. Then his cheeks tingled
+ when he remembered that he had almost scolded her; and he concocted a very
+ different speech, and straightway repeated it in imagination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is lovers' pastime; I own it funny; but it is open to one objection,
+ this single practice of sitting upon eggs no longer chickenable, carried
+ to a habit, is capable of turning a solid intellect into a liquid one, and
+ ruining a mind's career.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We leave Mr. Vane, therefore, with a hope that he will not do it every
+ night; and we follow his friend to the close of our chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hey for a definition!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What is diplomacy? Is it folly in a coat that looks like sagacity? Had Sir
+ Charles Pomander, instead of watching Mr. Vane and Mrs. Woffington, asked
+ the former whether he admired the latter, and whether the latter
+ responded, straightforward Vane would have told him the whole truth in a
+ minute. Diplomacy therefore was, as it often is, a waste of time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But diplomacy did more in this case, it <i>sapienter descendebat in
+ fossam;</i> it fell on its nose with gymnastic dexterity, as it generally
+ does, upon my word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To watch Mrs. Woffington's face <i>vis-a-vis</i> Mr. Vane, Pomander
+ introduced Vane to the green-room of the Theater Royal, Covent Garden. By
+ this Pomander learned nothing, because Mrs. Woffington had, with a
+ wonderful appearance of openness, the closest face in Europe when she
+ chose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, by introducing this country gentleman to this
+ green-room, he gave a mighty impulse and opportunity to Vane's love; an
+ opportunity which he forgot the timid, inexperienced Damon might otherwise
+ never have found.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here diplomacy was not policy, for, as my sagacious reader has perhaps
+ divined, Sir Charles Pomander <i>was after her himself.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ YES, Sir Charles was <i>after</i> Mrs. Woffington. I use that phrase
+ because it is a fine generic one, suitable to different kinds of
+ love-making.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Vane's sentiments were an inexplicable compound; but respect,
+ enthusiasm, and deep admiration were the uppermost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The good Sir Charles was no enigma. He had a vacancy in his establishment&mdash;a
+ very high situation, too, for those who like that sort of thing&mdash;the
+ head of his table, his left hand when he drove in the Park, etc. To this
+ he proposed to promote Mrs. Woffington. She was handsome and witty, and he
+ liked her. But that was not what caused him to pursue her; slow,
+ sagacious, inevitable as a beagle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was celebrated, and would confer great <i>eclat</i> on him. The
+ scandal of possessing her was a burning temptation. Women admire celebrity
+ in a man; but men adore it in a woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The world,&rdquo; says Philip, &ldquo;is a famous man; What will not women love so
+ taught?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I will try to answer this question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The women will more readily forgive disgusting physical deformity for
+ Fame's sake than we. They would embrace with more rapture a famous
+ orang-outang than we an illustrious chimpanzee; but when it comes to moral
+ deformity the tables are turned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had the queen pardoned Mr. Greenacre and Mrs. Manning, would the great
+ rush have been on the hero, or the heroine? Why, on Mrs. Macbeth! To her
+ would the blackguards have brought honorable proposals, and the gentry
+ liberal ones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Greenacre would have found more female admirers than I ever shall; but the
+ grand stream of sexual admiration would have set Mariaward. This fact is
+ as dark as night; but it is as sure as the sun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day &ldquo;the friends&rdquo; (most laughable of human substantives!) met in
+ the theater, and again visited the green-room; and this time Vane
+ determined to do himself more justice. He was again disappointed; the
+ actress's manner was ceremoniously polite. She was almost constantly on
+ the stage, and in a hurry when off it; and, when there was a word to be
+ got with her the ready, glib Sir Charles was sure to get it. Vane could
+ not help thinking it hard that a man who professed no respect for her
+ should thus keep the light from him; and he could hardly conceal his
+ satisfaction when Pomander, at night, bade him farewell for a fortnight.
+ Pressing business took Sir Charles into the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The good Sir Charles, however, could not go without leaving his sting
+ behind as a companion to his friend. He called on Mr. Vane and after a
+ short preface, containing the words &ldquo;our friendship,&rdquo; &ldquo;old kindness,&rdquo; &ldquo;my
+ greater experience,&rdquo; he gravely warned him against Mrs. Woffington.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not that I would say this if you could take her for what she is, and
+ amuse yourself with her as she will with you, if she thinks it worth her
+ while. But I see you have a heart, and she will make a football of it, and
+ torment you beyond all you have ever conceived of human anguish.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Vane colored high, and was about to interrupt the speaker; but he
+ continued:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There, I am in a hurry. But ask Quin, or anybody who knows her history,
+ you will find she has had scores of lovers, and no one remains her friend
+ after they part.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Men are such villains!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very likely,&rdquo; was the reply; &ldquo;but twenty men don't ill-use one good
+ woman; those are not the proportions. Adieu!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This last hit frightened Mr. Vane, he began to look into himself; he could
+ not but feel that he was a mere child in this woman's hands; and, more
+ than that, his conscience told him that if his heart should be made a
+ football of it would be only a just and probable punishment. For there
+ were particular reasons why he, of all men, had no business to look twice
+ at any woman whose name was Woffington.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night he avoided the green-room, though he could not forego the play;
+ but the next night he determined to stay at home altogether. Accordingly,
+ at five o'clock, the astounded box-keeper wore a visage of dismay&mdash;there
+ was no shilling for him! and Mr. Vane's nightly shilling had assumed the
+ sanctity of salary in his mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Vane strolled disconsolate; he strolled by the Thames, he strolled up
+ and down the Strand; and, finally, having often admired the wisdom of
+ moths in their gradual approach to what is not good for them, he strolled
+ into the green-room, Covent Garden, and sat down. When there he did not
+ feel happy. Besides, she had always been cold to him, and had given no
+ sign of desiring his acquaintance, still less of recognition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Vane had often seen a weathercock at work, and he had heard a woman
+ compared to it; but he had never realized the simplicity, beauty and
+ justice of the simile. He was therefore surprised, as well as thrilled,
+ when Mrs. Woffington, so cool, ceremonious and distant hitherto, walked up
+ to him in the green-room with a face quite wreathed in smiles, and,
+ without preliminary, thanked him for all the beautiful flowers he had sent
+ her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What, Mrs. Woffington&mdash;what, you recognize me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course, and have been foolish enough to feel quite supported by the
+ thought I had at least one friend in the house. But,&rdquo; said she, looking
+ down, &ldquo;now you must not be angry; here are some stones that have fallen
+ somehow among the flowers. I am going to give you them back, because I
+ value flowers, so I cannot have them mixed with anything else; but don't
+ ask me for a flower back,&rdquo; added she, seeing the color mount on his face,
+ &ldquo;for I would not give one of them to you, or anybody.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Imagine the effect of this on a romantic disposition like Mr. Vane's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He told her how glad he was that she could distinguish his features amid
+ the crowd of her admirers; he confessed he had been mortified when he
+ found himself, as he thought, entirely a stranger to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She interrupted him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you know your friend Sir Charles Pomander? No! I am almost sure you
+ do; well, he is a man I do not like. He is deceitful, besides he is a
+ wicked man. There, to be plain with you, he was watching me all that
+ night, the first time you came here, and, because I saw he was watching me
+ I would not know who you were, nor anything about you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you looked as if you had never seen me before.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course I did, when I had made up my mind to,&rdquo; said the actress,
+ naively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Charles has left London for a fortnight, so, if he is the only
+ obstacle, I hope you will know me every night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, you sent me no flowers yesterday or to-day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I will to-morrow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then I am sure I shall know your face again; good-by. Won't you see me in
+ the last act, and tell me how ill I do it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, yes!&rdquo; and he hurried to his box, and so the actress secured one pair
+ of hands for her last act.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He returned to the green-room, but she did not revisit that verdant bower.
+ The next night, after the usual compliments, she said to him, looking down
+ with a sweet, engaging air:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I sent a messenger into the country to know about that lady.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What lady?&rdquo; said Vane, scarcely believing his senses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That you were so unkind to me about.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I, unkind to you? what a brute I must be!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My meaning is, you justly rebuked me, only you should not tell an actress
+ she has no heart&mdash;that is always understood. Well, Sir Charles
+ Pomander said she married a third in two months!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And did she?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, it was in six weeks; that man never tells the truth; and since then
+ she has married a fourth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am glad of it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So am I, since you awakened my conscience.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Delicious flattery! and of all flattery the sweetest, when a sweet
+ creature does flattery, not merely utters it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After this, Vane made no more struggles; he surrendered himself to the
+ charming seduction, and as his advances were respectful, but ardent and
+ incessant, he found himself at the end of a fortnight Mrs. Woffington's
+ professed lover.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They wrote letters to each other every day. On Sunday they went to church
+ together in the morning, and spent the afternoon in the suburbs wherever
+ grass was and dust was not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the next fortnight, poor Vane thought he had pretty well fathomed this
+ extraordinary woman's character. Plumb the Atlantic with an eighty-fathom
+ line, sir!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She is religious,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;she loves a church much better than a
+ playhouse, and she never laughs nor goes to sleep in church as I do. And
+ she is breaking me of swearing&mdash;by degrees. She says that no fashion
+ can justify what is profane, and that it must be vulgar as well as wicked.
+ And she is frankness and simplicity itself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another thing that charmed him was her disinterestedness. She ordered him
+ to buy her a present every day, but it was never to cost above a shilling.
+ If an article could be found that cost exactly tenpence (a favorite sum of
+ hers), she was particularly pleased, and these shilling presents were
+ received with a flush of pleasure and brightening eyes. But when one day
+ he appeared with a diamond necklace, it was taken very coldly, he was not
+ even thanked for it, and he was made to feel, once for all, that the
+ tenpenny ones were the best investments toward her favor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he found out that she was very prudent and rather stingy; of Spartan
+ simplicity in her diet, and a scorner of dress off the stage. To redeem
+ this she was charitable, and her charity and her economy sometimes had a
+ sore fight, during which she was peevish, poor little soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day she made him a request.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can't bear you should think me worse than I am, and I don't want you to
+ think me better than I am.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vane trembled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But don't speak to others about me; promise, and I will promise to tell
+ you my whole story, whenever you are entitled to such a confidence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When shall I be entitled to it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When I am sure you love me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you doubt that now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes! I think you love me, but I am not sure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Margaret, remember I have known you much longer than you have known me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes! Two months before we ever spoke I lived upon your face and voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is to say you looked from your box at me upon the stage, and did not
+ I look from the stage at you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never! you always looked at the pit, and my heart used to sink.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On the 17th of May you first came into that box. I noticed you a little,
+ the next day I noticed you a little more; I saw you fancied you liked me,
+ after a while I could not have played without you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here was delicious flattery again, and poor Vane believed every word of
+ it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for her request and her promise, she showed her wisdom in both these.
+ As Sir Charles observed, it is a wonderful point gained if you allow a
+ woman to tell her story her own way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How the few facts that are allowed to remain get molded and twisted out of
+ ugly forms into pretty shapes by those supple, dexterous fingers!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This present story cannot give the life of Mrs. Woffington, but only one
+ great passage therein, as do the epic and dramatic writers; but since
+ there was often great point in any sentences spoken on important occasions
+ by this lady, I will just quote her defense of herself. The reader may be
+ sure she did not play her weakest card; let us give her the benefit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day she and Kitty Clive were at it ding-dong; the green-room was full
+ of actors, male and female, but there were no strangers, and the ladies
+ were saying things which the men of this generation only think; at last
+ Mrs. Woffington finding herself roughly, and, as she thought, unjustly
+ handled, turned upon the assembly and said: &ldquo;What man did ever I ruin in
+ all my life? Speak who can!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And there was a dead silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What woman is there here at as much as three pounds per week even, that
+ hasn't ruined two at the very least?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Report says there was a dead silence again, until Mrs. Clive perked up,
+ and said she had only ruined one, and that was his own fault!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Woffington declined to attach weight to this example. &ldquo;Kitty Clive is
+ the hook without the bait,&rdquo; said she; and the laugh turned, as it always
+ did, against Peggy's antagonist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus much was speedily shown to Mr. Vane, that, whatever were Mrs.
+ Woffington's intentions toward him, interest had at present nothing to do
+ with them; indeed it was made clear that even were she to surrender her
+ liberty to him, it would only be as a princess, forging golden chains for
+ herself with her own royal hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another fortnight passed to the mutual satisfaction of the lovers. To Vane
+ it was a dream of rapture to be near this great creature, whom thousands
+ admired at such a distance; to watch over her, to take her to the theater
+ in a warm shawl, to stand at the wing and receive her as she came radiant
+ from her dressing-room, to watch her from her rear as she stood like some
+ power about to descend on the stage, to see her falcon-like stoop upon the
+ said stage, and hear the burst of applause that followed, as the report
+ does the flash; to compare this with the spiritless crawl with which
+ common artists went on, tame from their first note to their last; to take
+ her hand when she came off, feel how her nerves were strung like a
+ greyhound's after a race, and her whole frame in a high even glow, with
+ the great Pythoness excitement of art.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And to have the same great creature leaning her head on his shoulder, and
+ listening with a charming complacency, while he purred to her of love and
+ calm delights, alternate with still greater triumphs; for he was to turn
+ dramatic writer, for her sake, was to write plays, a woman the hero, and
+ love was to inspire him, and passion supply the want of pencraft. (You
+ make me laugh, Mr. Vane!)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this was heavenly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then with all her dash, and fire, and bravado, she was a thorough
+ woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Margaret!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ernest!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I want to ask you a question. Did you really cry because that Miss
+ Bellamy had dresses from Paris?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It does not seem very likely.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, but tell me; did you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who said I did?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Cibber.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Old fool!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, but did you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did I what?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cry!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ernest, the minx's dresses were beautiful.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No doubt. But did you cry?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And mine were dirty; I don't care about gilt rags, but dirty dresses,
+ ugh!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tell me, then.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tell you what?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you cry or not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! he wants to find out whether I am a fool, and despise me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I think I should love you better. For hitherto I have seen no
+ weakness in you, and it makes me uncomfortable.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be comforted! Is it not a weakness to like you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are free from that weakness, or you would gratify my curiosity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be pleased to state, in plain, intelligible English, what you require of
+ me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I want to know, in one word, did you cry or not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Promise to tease me no more then, and I'll tell you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I promise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You won't despise me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Despise you! of course not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, then&mdash;I don't remember!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On another occasion they were seated in the dusk, by the side of the canal
+ in the Park, when a little animal began to potter about on an adjacent
+ bank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Woffington contemplated it with curiosity and delight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, you pretty creature!&rdquo; said she. &ldquo;Now you are a rabbit; at least, I
+ think so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Vane, innocently; &ldquo;that is a rat.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! ah! ah!&rdquo; screamed Mrs. Woffington, and pinched his arm. This
+ frightened the rat, who disappeared. She burst out laughing: &ldquo;There's a
+ fool! The thing did not frighten me, and the name did. Depend upon it,
+ it's true what they say&mdash;that off the stage, I am the greatest fool
+ there is. I'll never be so absurd again. Ah! ah! ah! here it is again&rdquo;
+ (scream and pinch, as before). &ldquo;Do take me from this horrid place, where
+ monsters come from the great deep.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And she flounced away, looking daggers askant at the place the rat had
+ vacated in equal terror.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this was silly, but it pleases us men, and contrast is so charming!
+ This same fool was brimful of talent&mdash;and cunning, too, for that
+ matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She played late that night, and Mr. Vane saw the same creature, who dared
+ not stay where she was liable to a distant rat, spring upon the stage as a
+ gay rake, and flash out her rapier, and act valor's king to the life, and
+ seem ready to eat up everybody, King Fear included; and then, after her
+ brilliant sally upon the public, Sir Harry Wildair came and stood beside
+ Mr. Vane. Her bright skin, contrasted with her powdered periwig, became
+ dazzling. She used little rouge, but that little made her eyes two balls
+ of black lightning. From her high instep to her polished forehead, all was
+ symmetry. Her leg would have been a sculptor's glory; and the curve from
+ her waist to her knee was Hogarth's line itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She stood like Mercury new lighted on a heaven-kissing hill. She placed
+ her foot upon the ground, as she might put a hand upon her lover's
+ shoulder. We indent it with our eleven undisguised stone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was Sir Harry Wildair, who stood by Mr. Vane, glittering with diamond
+ buckles, gorgeous with rich satin breeches, velvet coat, ruffles, <i>pictcae
+ vestis et auri;</i> and as she bent her long eye-fringes down on him (he
+ was seated), all her fiery charms gradually softened and quivered down to
+ womanhood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The first time I was here,&rdquo; said Vane, &ldquo;my admiration of you broke out to
+ Mr. Cibber; and what do you think he said?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That you praised me, for me to hear you. Did you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Acquit me of such meanness.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Forgive me. It is just what I should have done, had I been courting an
+ actress.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think you have not met many ingenuous spirits, dear friend.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not one, my child.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was a phrase she often applied to him now.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The old fellow pretended to hear what I said, too; and I am sure you did
+ not&mdash;did you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Guess.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I guess not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am afraid I must plead guilty. An actress's ears are so quick to hear
+ praise, to tell you the truth, I did catch a word or two, and, 'It told,
+ sir&mdash;it told.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You alarm me! At this rate, I shall never know what you see, hear or
+ think, by your face.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When you want to know anything, ask me, and I will tell you; but nobody
+ else shall learn anything, nor even you, any other way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you hear the feeble tribute of praise I was paying you, when you came
+ in?&rdquo; inquired Vane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. You did not say that my voice had the compass and variety of nature,
+ and my movements were free and beautiful, while the others when in motion
+ were stilts, and coffee-pots when in repose, did you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Something of the sort, I believe,&rdquo; cried Vane, laughing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I melted from one fine statue into another, I restored the Antinous to
+ his true sex.&mdash;Goose!&mdash;Painters might learn their art from me
+ (in my dressing-room, no doubt), and orators revive at my lips the music
+ of Athens, that quelled mad mobs and princes drunk with victory.&mdash;Silly
+ fellow!&mdash;Praise was never so sweet to me,&rdquo; murmured she, inclining
+ like a goddess of love toward him; and he fastened on two velvet lips,
+ that did not shun the sweet attack, but gently parted with a heavenly
+ sigh; while her heaving bosom and yielding frame and swimming eyes
+ confessed her conqueror.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That morning Mr. Vane had been dispirited, and apparently
+ self-discontented; but at night he went home in a state of mental
+ intoxication. His poetic enthusiasm, his love, his vanity, were all
+ gratified at once. And all these, singly, have conquered Prudence and
+ Virtue a million times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had confessed to him that she was disposed to risk her happiness on
+ him; she had begged him to submit to a short probation; and she had
+ promised, if her confidence and esteem remained unimpaired at the close of
+ that period&mdash;which was not to be an unhappy one&mdash;to take
+ advantage of the summer holidays, and cross the water with him, and forget
+ everything in the world with him, but love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How was it that the very next morning clouds chased one another across his
+ face? Was it that men are happy but while the chase is doubtful? Was it
+ the letter from Pomander announcing his return, and sneeringly inquiring
+ whether he was still the dupe of Peg Woffington? or was it that same
+ mysterious disquiet which attacked him periodically, and then gave way for
+ a while to pleasure and her golden dreams?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day was to be a day of delight. He was to entertain her at his
+ own house; and, to do her honor, he had asked Mr. Cibber, Mr. Quin and
+ other actors, critics, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our friend, Sir Charles Pomander, had been guilty of two ingenuities:
+ first, he had written three or four letters, full of respectful
+ admiration, to Mrs. Woffington, of whom he spoke slightingly to Vane;
+ second, he had made a disingenuous purchase.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This purchase was Pompey, Mrs. Woffington's little black slave. It is a
+ horrid fact, but Pompey did not love his mistress. He was a little
+ enamored of her, as small boys are apt to be, but, on the whole, a
+ sentiment of hatred slightly predominated in his little black bosom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not without excuse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This lady was subject to two unpleasant companions&mdash;sorrow and
+ bitterness. About twice a week she would cry for two hours; and after this
+ class of fit she generally went abroad, and made a round of certain poor
+ or sick <i>proteges</i> she had, and returned smiling and cheerful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But other twice a week she might be seen to sit upon her chair, contracted
+ into half her size, and looking daggers at the universe in general, the
+ world in particular; and on these occasions, it must be owned, she stayed
+ at home, and sometimes whipped Pompey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pompey had not the sense to reflect that he ought to have been whipped
+ every day, or the <i>esprit de corps</i> to be consoled by observing that
+ this sort of thing did his mistress good. What he felt was, that his
+ mistress, who did everything well, whipped him with energy and skill; it
+ did not take ten seconds, but still, in that brief period, Pompey found
+ himself dusted and polished off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sacred principle of justice was as strong in Mrs. Woffington as in the
+ rest of her sex; she had not one grain of it. When she was not in her
+ tantrums, the mischievous imp was as sacred from check or remonstrance as
+ a monkey or a lap-dog; and several female servants left the house on his
+ account.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Nemesis overtook him in the way we have hinted, and it put his little
+ black pipe out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lady had taken him out of great humanity; he was fed like a game-cock,
+ and dressed like a Barbaric prince; and once when he was ill his mistress
+ watched him, and nursed him, and tended him with the same white hand that
+ plied the obnoxious whip; and when he died, she alone withheld her consent
+ from his burial, and this gave him a chance black boys never get, and he
+ came to again; but still these tarnation lickings &ldquo;stuck in him gizzard.&rdquo;
+ So when Sir Charles's agent proposed to him certain silver coins, cheap at
+ a little treachery, the ebony ape grinned till he turned half ivory, and
+ became a spy in the house of his mistress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reader will have gathered that the good Sir Charles had been quietly
+ in London some hours before he announced himself as <i>paulo post futurum.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Diamond cut diamond; a diplomat stole this march upon an actress, and took
+ her black pawn. One for Pomander! (Gun.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ TRIPLET, the Cerberus of art, who had the first bark in this legend, and
+ has since been out of hearing, ran from Lambeth to Covent Garden, on
+ receipt of Mr. Vane's note. But ran he never so quick, he had built a
+ full-sized castle in the air before he reached Bow Street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The letter hinted at an order upon his muse for amatory verse; delightful
+ task, cheering prospect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bid a man whose usual lot it is to break stones for the parish at tenpence
+ the cubic yard&mdash;bid such an one play at marbles with some stone taws
+ for half an hour per day, and pocket one pound one&mdash;bid a poor horse
+ who has drawn those stones about, and browsed short grass by the wayside&mdash;bid
+ him canter a few times round a grassy ring, and then go to his corn&mdash;in
+ short, bid Rosinante change with Pegasus, and you do no more than Mr.
+ Vane's letter held out to Triplet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The amatory verse of that day was not up-hill work. There was a beaten
+ track on a dead level, and you followed it. You told the tender creature,
+ with a world of circumlocution, that, &ldquo;without joking now,&rdquo; she was a
+ leper, ditto a tigress, item marble. You next feigned a lucid interval,
+ and to be on the point of detesting your monster, but in twenty more
+ verses love became, as usual, stronger than reason, and you wound up your
+ rotten yarn thus:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You hugged a golden chain. You drew deeper into your wound a barbed shaft,
+ like&mdash;(any wild animal will do, no one of them is such an ass, so you
+ had an equal title to all). And on looking back you saw with horrible
+ complacency that you had inflicted one hundred locusts, five feet long,
+ upon oppressed humanity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wont to travel over acres of canvas for a few shillings, and roods of
+ paper on bare speculation, Triplet knew he could make a thousand a year at
+ the above work without thinking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He came therefore to the box-keeper with his eyes glittering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Vane?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just gone out with a gentleman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll wait then.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Mr. Vane, we know, was in the green-room, and went home by the
+ stage-door. The last thing he thought of was poor Triplet; the rich do not
+ dream how they disappoint the poor. Triplet's castle fell as many a
+ predecessor had. When the lights were put out, he left the theater with a
+ bitter sigh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If this gentleman knew how many sweet children I have, and what a good,
+ patient, suffering wife, sure he would not have chosen me to make a fool
+ of!&rdquo; said the poor fellow to himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Bow Street, he turned, and looked back upon the theater. How gloomy and
+ grand it loomed!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; thought he, &ldquo;if I could but conquer you; and why not? All history
+ shows that nothing is unconquerable except perseverance. Hannibal
+ conquered the Alps, and I'll conquer you,&rdquo; cried Triplet, firmly. &ldquo;Yes,
+ this visit is not lost; here I register a vow: I will force my way into
+ that mountain of masonry, or perish in the attempt.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet's most unpremeditated thoughts and actions often savored
+ ridiculously of the sublime. Then and there, gazing with folded arms on
+ this fortress of Thespis, the polytechnic man organized his first assault.
+ The next evening he made it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Five months previously he had sent the manager three great, large
+ tragedies. He knew the aversion a theatrical manager has to read a
+ manuscript play, not recommended by influential folk; an aversion which
+ always has been carried to superstition. So he hit on the following
+ scheme:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He wrote Mr. Rich a letter; in this he told Mr. Rich that he (Triplet) was
+ aware what a quantity of trash is offered every week to a manager, how
+ disheartening it must be to read it at all, and how natural, after a
+ while, to read none. Therefore, he (Triplet) had provided that Mr. Rich
+ might economize his time, and yet not remain in ignorance of the dramatic
+ treasure that lay ready to his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The soul of a play,&rdquo; continued Triplet, &ldquo;is the plot or fable. A
+ gentleman of your experience can decide at once whether a plot or story is
+ one to take the public!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So then he drew out, in full, the three plots. He wrote these plots in
+ verse! Heaven forgive us all, he really did. There were also two margins
+ left; on one, which was narrow, he jotted down the <i>locale</i> per page
+ of the most brilliant passages; on the other margin, which was as wide as
+ the column of the plot, he made careful drawings of the personages in the
+ principal dramatic situations; scrolls issued from their mouths, on which
+ were written the words of fire that were flowing from each in these
+ eruptions of the dramatic action. All was referred to pages in the
+ manuscripts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By this means, sir,&rdquo; resumed the latter, &ldquo;you will gut my fish in a
+ jiffy; permit me to recall that expression, with apologies for my freedom.
+ I would say, you will, in a few minutes of your valuable existence, skim
+ the cream of Triplet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This author's respect for the manager's time carried him into further and
+ unusual details.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Breakfast,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;is a quiet meal. Let me respectfully suggest, that
+ by placing one of my plots on the table, with, say, the sugar-basin upon
+ it (this, again, is a mere suggestion), and the play it appertains to on
+ your other side, you can readily judge my work without disturbing the
+ avocations of the day, and master a play in the twinkling of a teacup;
+ forgive my facetiousness. This day month, at ten of the clock, I shall
+ expect,&rdquo; said Triplet, with sudden severity, &ldquo;sir, your decision!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, gliding back to the courtier, he formally disowned all special title
+ to the consideration he expected from Mr. Rich's well-known courtesy;
+ still he begged permission to remind that gentleman that he had, six years
+ ago, painted for him a large scene, illuminated by two great poetical
+ incidents: a red sun, of dimensions never seen out of doors in this or any
+ country; and an ocean of sand, yellower than up to that time had been
+ attained in art or nature; and that once, when the audience, late in the
+ evening, had suddenly demanded a popular song from Mr. Nokes, he
+ (Triplet), seeing the orchestra thinned by desertion, and nugatory by
+ intoxication, had started from the pit, resuscitated with the whole
+ contents of his snuff-box the bass fiddle, snatched the leader's violin,
+ and carried Mr. Nokes triumphantly through; that thunders of applause had
+ followed, and Mr. Nokes had kindly returned thanks <i>for both;</i> but
+ that he (Triplet) had hastily retired to evade the manager's
+ acknowledgments, preferring to wait an opportunity like the present, when
+ both interests could be conciliated, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This letter he posted at its destination, to save time, and returned
+ triumphant home. He had now forgiven and almost forgotten Vane; and had
+ reflected that, after all, the drama was his proper walk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear,&rdquo; said he to Mrs. Triplet, &ldquo;this family is on the eve of a great
+ triumph!&rdquo; Then, inverting that order of the grandiloquent and the homely
+ which he invented in our first chapter, he proceeded to say: &ldquo;I have
+ reared in a single day a new avenue by which histrionic greatness,
+ hitherto obstructed, may become accessible. Wife, I think I have done the
+ trick at last. Lysimachus!&rdquo; added he, &ldquo;let a libation be poured out on so
+ smiling an occasion, and a burnt-offering rise to propitiate the celestial
+ powers. Run to the 'Sun,' you dog. Three pennyworth of ale, and a hap'orth
+ o' tobacco.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ere the month was out, I am sorry to say, the Triplets were reduced to a
+ state of beggary. Mrs. Triplet's health had long been failing; and,
+ although her duties at her little theater were light and occasional, the
+ manager was obliged to discharge her, since she could not be depended
+ upon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The family had not enough to eat! Think of that! They were not warm at
+ night, and they felt gnawing and faintness often by day. Think of that!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fortune was unjust here. The man was laughable, and a goose; and had no
+ genius either for writing, painting, or acting; but in that he resembled
+ most writers, painters, and actors of his own day and ours. He was not
+ beneath the average of what men call art, and it is art's antipodes&mdash;treadmill
+ artifice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Other fluent ninnies shared gain, and even fame, and were called 'penmen,'
+ in Triplet's day. Other ranters were quietly getting rich by noise. Other
+ liars and humbugs were painting out o' doors indoors, and eating mutton
+ instead of thistles for drenched stinging-nettles, yclept trees; for
+ block-tin clouds; for butlers' pantry seas, and garret-conceived lakes;
+ for molten sugar-candy rivers; for airless atmosphere and sunless air; for
+ carpet nature, and cold, dead fragments of an earth all soul and living
+ glory to every cultivated eye but a routine painter's. Yet the man of many
+ such mediocrities could not keep the pot boiling. We suspect that, to
+ those who would rise in life, even strong versatility is a very doubtful
+ good, and weak versatility ruination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last, the bitter, weary month was gone, and Triplet's eye brightened
+ gloriously. He donned his best suit; and, while tying his cravat, lectured
+ his family. First, he complimented them upon their deportment in
+ adversity; hinted that moralists, not experience, had informed him
+ prosperity was far more trying to the character. Put them all solemnly on
+ their guard down to Lucy, <i>aetat</i> five, that they were <i>morituri</i>
+ and <i>ae,</i> and must be pleased to abstain from &ldquo;insolent gladness&rdquo;
+ upon his return.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sweet are the uses of adversity!&rdquo; continued this cheerful monitor. &ldquo;If we
+ had not been hard up this while, we should not come with a full relish to
+ meat three times a week, which, unless I am an ass (and I don't see myself
+ in that light),&rdquo; said Triplet dryly, &ldquo;will, I apprehend, be, after this
+ day, the primary condition of our future existence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;James, take the picture with you,&rdquo; said Mrs. Triplet, in one of those
+ calm, little, desponding voices that fall upon the soul so agreeably when
+ one is a cock-a-hoop, and desires, with permission, so to remain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What on earth am I to take Mrs. Woffington's portrait for?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We have nothing in the house,&rdquo; said the wife, blushing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet's eye glittered like a rattlesnake's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The intimation is eccentric,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Are you mad, Jane? Pray,&rdquo;
+ continued he, veiling his wrath in scornful words, &ldquo;is it requisite,
+ heroic, or judicious on the eve, or more correctly the morn, of affluence
+ to deposit an unfinished work of art with a mercenary relation? Hang it,
+ Jane! would you really have me pawn Mrs. Woffington to-day?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;James,&rdquo; said Jane steadily, &ldquo;the manager may disappoint you, we have
+ often been disappointed; so take the picture with you. They will give you
+ ten shillings on it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet was one of those who see things roseate, Mrs. Triplet lurid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Madam,&rdquo; said the poet, &ldquo;for the first time in our conjugal career, your
+ commands deviate so entirely from reason that I respectfully withdraw that
+ implicit obedience which has hitherto constituted my principal reputation.
+ I'm hanged if I do it, Jane!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dear James, to oblige me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That alters the case; you confess it is unreasonable?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, yes! it is only to oblige me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Enough!&rdquo; said Triplet, whose tongue was often a flail that fell on
+ friend, foe and self indiscriminately. &ldquo;Allow it to be unreasonable, and I
+ do it as a matter of course&mdash;to please you, Jane.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly the good soul wrapped it in green baize; but to relieve his
+ mind he was obliged to get behind his wife, and shrug his shoulders to
+ Lysimachus and the eldest girl, as who should say <i>voila bien une femme
+ votre mere a vous!</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last he was off, in high spirits. He reached Covent Garden at half-past
+ ten, and there the poor fellow was sucked into our narrative whirlpool.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We must, however, leave him for a few minutes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ SIR CHARLES POMANDER was detained in the country much longer than he
+ expected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was rewarded by a little adventure. As he cantered up to London with
+ two servants and a post-boy, all riding on horses ordered in relays
+ beforehand, he came up with an antediluvian coach, stuck fast by the
+ road-side. Looking into the window, with the humane design of quizzing the
+ elders who should be there, he saw a young lady of surpassing beauty. This
+ altered the case; Sir Charles instantly drew bridle and offered his
+ services.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lady thanked him, and being an innocent country lady, she opened those
+ sluices, her eyes, and two tears gently trickled down, while she told him
+ how eager she was to reach London, and how mortified at this delay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The good Sir Charles was touched. He leaped his horse over a hedge,
+ galloped to a farm-house in sight, and returned with ropes and rustics.
+ These and Sir Charles's horses soon drew the coach out of some stiffish
+ clay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lady thanked him, and thanked him, and thanked him, with heightening
+ color and beaming eyes, and he rode away like a hero.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before he had gone five miles he became thoughtful and self-dissatisfied,
+ finally his remorse came to a head; he called to him the keenest of his
+ servants, Hunsdon, and ordered him to ride back past the carriage, then
+ follow and put up at the same inn, to learn who the lady was, and whither
+ going; and, this knowledge gained, to ride into town full speed and tell
+ his master all about it. Sir Charles then resumed his complacency, and
+ cantered into London that same evening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arrived there, he set himself in earnest to cut out his friend with Mrs.
+ Woffington. He had already caused his correspondence with that lady to
+ grow warm and more tender, by degrees. Keeping a copy of his last, he
+ always knew where he was. Cupid's barometer rose by rule; and so he
+ arrived by just gradations at an artful climax, and made her in terms of
+ chivalrous affection, an offer of a house, etc., three hundred a year,
+ etc., not forgetting his heart, etc. He knew that the ladies of the stage
+ have an ear for flattery and an eye to the main chance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The good Sir Charles felt sure that, however she might flirt with Vane or
+ others, she would not forego a position for any disinterested <i>penchant.</i>
+ Still, as he was a close player, he determined to throw a little cold
+ water on that flame. His plan, like everything truly scientific, was
+ simple.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll run her down to him, and ridicule him to her,&rdquo; resolved this
+ faithful friend and lover dear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He began with Vane. He found him just leaving his own house. After the
+ usual compliments, some such dialogue as this took place between
+ Telemachus and pseudo Mentor:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I trust you are not really in the power of this actress?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are the slave of a word,&rdquo; replied Vane. &ldquo;Would you confound black and
+ white because both are colors? She is like that sisterhood in nothing but
+ a name. Even on the stage they have nothing in common. They are puppets&mdash;all
+ attitude and trick; she is all ease, grace and nature.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nature!&rdquo; cried Pomander. <i>&ldquo;Laissez-moi tranquille.</i> They have
+ artifice&mdash;nature's libel. She has art&mdash;nature's counterfeit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Her voice is truth told by music,&rdquo; cried the poetical lover; &ldquo;theirs are
+ jingling instruments of falsehood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They are all instruments,&rdquo; said the satirist; &ldquo;she is rather the best
+ tuned and played.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Her face speaks in every lineament; theirs are rouged and wrinkled
+ masks.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Her mask is the best made, mounted, and moved; that is all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She is a fountain of true feeling.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; a pipe that conveys it without spilling or holding a drop.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She is an angel of talent, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She's a devil of deception.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She is a divinity to worship.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She's a woman to fight shy of. There is not a woman in London better
+ known,&rdquo; continued Sir Charles. &ldquo;She is a fair actress on the boards, and a
+ great actress off them; but I can tell you how to add a new charm to her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Heaven can only do that,&rdquo; said Vane, hastily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, you can. Make her blush. Ask her for the list of your predecessors.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vane winced visibly. He quickened his step, as if to get rid of this
+ gadfly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I spoke to Mr. Quin,&rdquo; said he, at last; &ldquo;and he, who has no prejudice,
+ paid her character the highest compliment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have paid it the highest it admits,&rdquo; was the reply. &ldquo;You have let it
+ deceive you.&rdquo; Sir Charles continued in a more solemn tone: &ldquo;Pray be
+ warned. Why is it every man of intellect loves an actress once in his
+ life, and no man of sense ever did it twice?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This last hit, coming after the carte and tierce we have described,
+ brought an expression of pain to Mr. Vane's face. He said abruptly:
+ &ldquo;Excuse me, I desire to be alone for half an hour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Machiavel bowed; and, instead of taking offense, said, in a tone full of
+ feeling: &ldquo;Ah! I give you pain! But you are right; think it calmly over a
+ while, and you will see I advise you well.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then made for the theater, and the weakish personage he had been
+ playing upon walked down to the river, almost ran, in fact. He wanted to
+ be out of sight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He got behind some houses, and then his face seemed literally to break
+ loose from confinement; so anxious, sad, fearful and bitter were the
+ expressions that coursed each other over that handsome countenance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What is the meaning of these hot and cold fits? It is not Sir Charles who
+ has the power to shake Mr. Vane so without some help from within. <i>There
+ is something wrong about this man!</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ MACHIAVEL entered the green-room, intending to wait for Mrs. Woffington,
+ and carry out the second part of his plan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He knew that weak minds cannot make head against ridicule, and with this
+ pickax he proposed to clear the way, before he came to grave, sensible,
+ business love with the lady. Machiavel was a man of talent. If he has been
+ a silent personage hitherto, it is merely because it was not his cue to
+ talk, but listen; otherwise, he was rather a master of the art of speech.
+ He could be insinuating, eloquent, sensible, or satirical, at will. This
+ personage sat in the green-room. In one hand was his diamond snuffbox, in
+ the other a richly laced handkerchief; his clouded cane reposed by his
+ side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was an air of success about this personage. The gentle reader,
+ however conceited a dog, could not see how he was to defeat Sir Charles,
+ who was tall, stout, handsome, rich, witty, self-sufficient, cool,
+ majestic, courageous, and in whom were united the advantages of a hard
+ head, a tough stomach, and no heart at all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This great creature sat expecting Mrs. Woffington, like Olympian Jove
+ awaiting Juno. But he was mortal, after all; for suddenly the serenity of
+ that adamantine countenance was disturbed; his eye dilated; his grace and
+ dignity were shaken. He huddled his handkerchief into one pocket, his
+ snuff-box into another, and forgot his cane. He ran to the door in
+ unaffected terror.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where are all his fine airs before a real danger? Love, intrigue,
+ diplomacy, were all driven from his mind; for he beheld that approaching,
+ which is the greatest peril and disaster known to social man. He saw a
+ bore coming into the room!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a wild thirst for novelty, Pomander had once penetrated to Goodman's
+ Fields Theater; there he had unguardedly put a question to a carpenter
+ behind the scene; a seedy-black poet instantly pushed the carpenter away
+ (down a trap, it is thought), and answered it in seven pages, and in
+ continuation was so vaguely communicative, that he drove Sir Charles back
+ into the far west.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles knew him again in a moment, and at sight of him bolted. They
+ met at the door. &ldquo;Ah! Mr. Triplet!&rdquo; said the fugitive, &ldquo;enchanted&mdash;to
+ wish you good-morning!&rdquo; and he plunged into the hiding-places of the
+ theater.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is a very polite gentleman!&rdquo; thought Triplet. He was followed by the
+ call-boy, to whom he was explaining that his avocations, though numerous,
+ would not prevent his paying Mr. Rich the compliment of waiting all day in
+ his green-room, sooner than go without an answer to three important
+ propositions, in which the town and the arts were concerned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is your name?&rdquo; said the boy of business to the man of words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Triplet,&rdquo; said Triplet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Triplet? There is something for you in the hall,&rdquo; said the urchin, and
+ went off to fetch it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I knew it,&rdquo; said Triplet to himself; &ldquo;they are accepted. There's a note
+ in the hall to fix the reading.&rdquo; He then derided his own absurdity in
+ having ever for a moment desponded. &ldquo;Master of three arts, by each of
+ which men grow fat, how was it possible he should starve all his days!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He enjoyed a natural vanity for a few moments, and then came more generous
+ feelings. What sparkling eyes there would be in Lambeth to-day! The
+ butcher, at sight of Mr. Rich's handwriting, would give him credit. Jane
+ should have a new gown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when his tragedies were played, and he paid! El Dorado! His children
+ should be the neatest in the street. Lysimachus and Roxalana should learn
+ the English language, cost what it might; sausages should be diurnal; and
+ he himself would not be puffed up, fat, lazy. No! he would work all the
+ harder, be affable as ever, and, above all, never swamp the father,
+ husband, and honest man in the poet and the blackguard of sentiment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next his reflections took a business turn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;These tragedies&mdash;the scenery? Oh, I shall have to paint it myself.
+ The heroes? Well, they have nobody who will play them as I should. (This
+ was true!) It will be hard work, all this; but then I shall be paid for
+ it. It cannot go on this way; I must and will be paid separately for my
+ branches.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just as he came to this resolution, the boy returned with a brown-paper
+ parcel, addressed to Mr. James Triplet. Triplet weighed it in his hand; it
+ was heavy. &ldquo;How is this?&rdquo; cried he. &ldquo;Oh, I see,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;these are the
+ tragedies. He sends them to me for some trifling alterations; managers
+ always do.&rdquo; Triplet then determined to adopt these alterations, if
+ judicious; for, argued he, sensibly enough: &ldquo;Managers are practical men;
+ and we, in the heat of composition, sometimes <i>(sic?)</i> say more than
+ is necessary, and become tedious.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With that he opened the parcel, and looked for Mr. Rich's communication;
+ it was not in sight. He had to look between the leaves of the manuscripts
+ for it; it was not there. He shook them; it did not fall out. He shook
+ them as a dog shakes a rabbit; nothing!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tragedies were returned without a word. It took him some time to
+ realize the full weight of the blow; but at last he saw that the manager
+ of the Theater Royal, Covent Garden, declined to take a tragedy by Triplet
+ into consideration or bare examination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned dizzy for a moment. Something between a sigh and a cry escaped
+ him, and he sank upon a covered bench that ran along the wall. His poor
+ tragedies fell here and there upon the ground, and his head went down upon
+ his hands, which rested on Mrs. Woffington's picture. His anguish was so
+ sharp, it choked his breath; when he recovered it, his eye bent down upon
+ the picture. &ldquo;Ah, Jane,&rdquo; he groaned, &ldquo;you know this villainous world
+ better than I!&rdquo; He placed the picture gently on the seat (that picture
+ must now be turned into bread), and slowly stooped for his tragedies; they
+ had fallen hither and thither; he had to crawl about for them; he was an
+ emblem of all the humiliations letters endure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he went after them on all-fours, more than one tear pattered on the
+ dusty floor. Poor fellow! he was Triplet, and could not have died without
+ tingeing the death-rattle with some absurdity; but, after all, he was a
+ father driven to despair; a castle-builder, with his work rudely
+ scattered; an artist, brutally crushed and insulted by a greater dunce
+ than himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Faint, sick, and dark, he sat a moment on the seat before he could find
+ strength to go home and destroy all the hopes he had raised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Triplet sat collapsed on the bench, fate sent into the room all in
+ one moment, as if to insult his sorrow, a creature that seemed the goddess
+ of gayety, impervious to a care. She swept in with a bold, free step, for
+ she was rehearsing a man's part, and thundered without rant, but with a
+ spirit and fire, and pace, beyond the conception of our poor tame
+ actresses of 1852, these lines:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, by the joys Which my soul still has uncontrolled pursued, I would
+ not turn aside from my least pleasure, Though all thy force were armed to
+ bar my way; But, like the birds, great Nature's happy commoners, Rifle the
+ sweets&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I beg&mdash;your par&mdash;don, sir!&rdquo; holding the book on a level with
+ her eye, she had nearly run over &ldquo;two poets instead of one.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, madam,&rdquo; said Triplet, admiring, though sad, wretched, but polite,
+ &ldquo;pray continue. Happy the hearer, and still happier the author of verses
+ so spoken. Ah!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; replied the lady, &ldquo;if you could persuade authors what we do for
+ them, when we coax good music to grow on barren words. Are you an author,
+ sir?&rdquo; added she, slyly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In a small way, madam. I have here three trifles&mdash;tragedies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Woffington looked askant at them, like a shy mare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, madam!&rdquo; said Triplet, in one of his insane fits, &ldquo;if I might but
+ submit them to such a judgment as yours?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He laid his hand on them. It was as when a strange dog sees us go to take
+ up a stone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The actress recoiled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am no judge of such things,&rdquo; cried she, hastily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet bit his lip. He could have killed her. It was provoking, people
+ would rather be hanged than read a manuscript. Yet what hopeless trash
+ they will read in crowds, which was manuscript a day ago. <i>Les
+ imbeciles!</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No more is the manager of this theater a judge of such things,&rdquo; cried the
+ outraged quill-driver, bitterly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! has he accepted them?&rdquo; said needle-tongue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, madam, he has had them six months, and see, madam, he has returned
+ them me without a word.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet's lip trembled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Patience, my good sir,&rdquo; was the merry reply. &ldquo;Tragic authors should
+ possess that, for they teach it to their audiences. Managers, sir, are
+ like Eastern monarchs, inaccessible but to slaves and sultanas. Do you
+ know I called upon Mr. Rich fifteen times before I could see him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You, madam? Impossible!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, it was years ago, and he has paid a hundred pounds for each of those
+ little visits. Well, now, let me see, fifteen times; you must write twelve
+ more tragedies, and then he will read <i>one;</i> and when he has read it,
+ he will favor you with his judgment upon it; and when you have got that,
+ you will have what all the world knows is not worth a farthing. He! he!
+ he!
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 'And like the birds, gay Nature's happy commoners,
+ Rifle the sweets'&mdash;mum&mdash;mum&mdash;mum.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Her high spirits made Triplet sadder. To think that one word from this
+ laughing lady would secure his work a hearing, and that he dared not ask
+ her. She was up in the world, he was down. She was great, he was nobody.
+ He felt a sort of chill at this woman&mdash;all brains and no heart. He
+ took his picture and his plays under his arms and crept sorrowfully away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The actress's eye fell on him as he went off like a fifth act. His Don
+ Quixote face struck her. She had seen it before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; said she.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Madam,&rdquo; said Triplet, at the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We have met before. There, don't speak, I'll tell you who you are. Yours
+ is a face that has been good to me, and I never forget them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Me, madam!&rdquo; said Triplet, taken aback. &ldquo;I trust I know what is due to you
+ better than to be good to you, madam,&rdquo; said he, in his confused way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To be sure!&rdquo; cried she, &ldquo;it is Mr. Triplet, good Mr. Triplet!&rdquo; And this
+ vivacious dame, putting her book down, seized both Triplet's hands and
+ shook them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He shook hers warmly in return out of excess of timidity, and dropped
+ tragedies, and kicked at them convulsively when they were down, for fear
+ they should be in her way, and his mouth opened, and his eyes glared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Triplet,&rdquo; said the lady, &ldquo;do you remember an Irish orange-girl you
+ used to give sixpence to at Goodman's Fields, and pat her on the head and
+ give her good advice, like a good old soul as you were? She took the
+ sixpence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Madam,&rdquo; said Trip, recovering a grain of pomp, &ldquo;singular as it may
+ appear, I remember the young person; she was very engaging. I trust no
+ harm hath befallen her, for methought I discovered, in spite of her
+ brogue, a beautiful nature in her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go along wid yer blarney,&rdquo; answered a rich brogue; &ldquo;an' is it the
+ comanther ye'd be putting on poor little Peggy?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh! oh gracious!&rdquo; gasped Triplet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; was the reply; but into that &ldquo;yes&rdquo; she threw a whole sentence of
+ meaning. &ldquo;Fine cha-ney oranges!&rdquo; chanted she, to put the matter beyond
+ dispute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Am I really so honored as to have patted you on that queen-like head!&rdquo;
+ and he glared at it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On the same head which now I wear,&rdquo; replied she, pompously. &ldquo;I kept it
+ for the convaynience hintirely, only there's more in it. Well, Mr.
+ Triplet, you see what time has done for me; now tell me whether he has
+ been as kind to you. Are you going to speak to me, Mr. Triplet?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a decayed hunter stands lean and disconsolate, head poked forward like
+ a goose's, but if hounds sweep by his paddock in full cry, followed by
+ horses who are what he was not, he does, by reason of the good blood that
+ is and will be in his heart, <i>dum spiritus hoss regit artus,</i> cock
+ his ears, erect his tail, and trot fiery to his extremest hedge, and look
+ over it, nostril distended, mane flowing, and neigh the hunt onward like a
+ trumpet; so Triplet, who had manhood at bottom, instead of whining out his
+ troubles in the ear of encouraging beauty, as a sneaking spirit would,
+ perked up, and resolved to put the best face upon it all before so
+ charming a creature of the other sex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, madam,&rdquo; cried he, with the air of one who could have smacked his
+ lips, &ldquo;Providence has blessed me with an excellent wife and four charming
+ children. My wife was Miss Chatterton; you remember her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes! Where is she playing now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, madam, her health is too weak for it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh!&mdash;You were scene-painter. Do you still paint scenes?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With the pen, madam, not the brush. As the wags said, I transferred the
+ distemper from my canvas to my imagination.&rdquo; And Triplet laughed
+ uproariously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he had done, Mrs. Woffington, who had joined the laugh, inquired
+ quietly whether his pieces had met with success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eminent&mdash;in the closet; the stage is to come!&rdquo; and he smiled
+ absurdly again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lady smiled back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In short,&rdquo; said Triplet, recapitulating, &ldquo;being blessed with health, and
+ more tastes in the arts than most, and a cheerful spirit, I should be
+ wrong, madam, to repine; and this day, in particular, is a happy one,&rdquo;
+ added the rose colorist, &ldquo;since the great Mrs. Woffington has deigned to
+ remember me, and call me friend.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was Triplet's summary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Woffington drew out her memorandum-book, and took down her summary of
+ the crafty Triplet's facts. So easy is it for us Triplets to draw the wool
+ over the eyes of women and Woffingtons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Triplet, discharged from scene-painting; wife, no engagement; four
+ children supported by his pen&mdash;that is to say, starving; lose no
+ time!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She closed her book; and smiled, and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish these things were comedies instead of trash-edies, as the French
+ call them; we would cut one in half, and slice away the finest passages,
+ and then I would act in it; and you would see how the stage-door would fly
+ open at sight of the author.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O Heaven!&rdquo; said poor Trip, excited by this picture. &ldquo;I'll go home, and
+ write a comedy this moment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay!&rdquo; said she; &ldquo;you had better leave the tragedies with me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear madam! You will read them?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ahem! I will make poor Rich read them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, madam, he has rejected them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is the first step. Reading them comes after, when it comes at all.
+ What have you got in that green baize?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In this green baize?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, in this green baize, then.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh madam! nothing&mdash;nothing! To tell the truth, it is an adventurous
+ attempt from memory. I saw you play Silvia, madam; I was so charmed, that
+ I came every night. I took your face home with me&mdash;forgive my
+ presumption, madam&mdash;and I produced this faint adumbration, which I
+ expose with diffidence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So then he took the green baize off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The color rushed into her face; she was evidently gratified. Poor, silly
+ Mrs. Triplet was doomed to be right about this portrait.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will give you a sitting,&rdquo; said she. &ldquo;You will find painting dull faces
+ a better trade than writing dull tragedies. Work for other people's
+ vanity, not your own; that is the art of art. And now I want Mr. Triplet's
+ address.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On the fly-leaf of each work, madam,&rdquo; replied that florid author, &ldquo;and
+ also at the foot of every page which contains a particularly brilliant
+ passage, I have been careful to insert the address of James Triplet,
+ painter, actor, and dramatist, and Mrs. Woffington's humble, devoted
+ servant.&rdquo; He bowed ridiculously low, and moved toward the door; but
+ something gushed across his heart, and he returned with long strides to
+ her. &ldquo;Madam!&rdquo; cried he, with a jaunty manner, &ldquo;you have inspired a son of
+ Thespis with dreams of eloquence, you have tuned in a higher key a poet's
+ lyre, you have tinged a painter's existence with brighter colors, and&mdash;and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ His mouth worked still, but no more artificial words would come. He sobbed
+ out, &ldquo;and God in heaven bless you, Mrs. Woffington!&rdquo; and ran out of the
+ room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Woffington looked after him with interest, for this confirmed her
+ suspicions; but suddenly her expression changed, she wore a look we have
+ not yet seen upon her&mdash;it was a half-cunning, half-spiteful look; it
+ was suppressed in a moment, she gave herself to her book, and presently
+ Sir Charles Pomander sauntered into the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! what, Mrs. Woffington here?&rdquo; said the diplomat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Charles Pomander, I declare!&rdquo; said the actress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have just parted with an admirer of yours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish I could part with them all,&rdquo; was the reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A pastoral youth, who means to win La Woffington by agricultural
+ courtship&mdash;as shepherds woo in sylvan shades.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With oaten pipe the rustic maids,&rdquo; quoth the Woffington, improvising.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The diplomat laughed, the actress laughed, and said, laughingly: <i>&ldquo;Tell
+ me what he says word for word?&rdquo;</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It will only make you laugh.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, and am I never to laugh, who provide so many laughs for you all?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>&ldquo;C'est juste.</i> You shall share the general merriment. Imagine a
+ romantic soul, who adores you for <i>your simplicity!&rdquo;</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My simplicity! Am I so very simple?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Sir Charles, monstrous dryly. &ldquo;He says you are out of place on
+ the stage, and wants to take the star from its firmament, and put it in a
+ cottage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not a star,&rdquo; replied the Woffington, &ldquo;I am only a meteor. And what
+ does the man think I am to do without this (here she imitated applause)
+ from my dear public's thousand hands?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are to have this&rdquo; (he mimicked a kiss) &ldquo;from a single mouth,
+ instead.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is mad! Tell me what more he says. Oh, don't stop to invent; I should
+ detect you; and you would only spoil this man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He laughed conceitedly. &ldquo;I should spoil him! Well, then, he proposes to be
+ your friend rather than your lover, and keep you from being talked of, he!
+ he! instead of adding to your <i>eclat.&rdquo;</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And if he is your friend, why don't you tell him my real character, and
+ send him into the country?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She said this rapidly and with an appearance of earnest. The diplomatist
+ fell into the trap.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;but he snaps his fingers at me and common sense and the
+ world. I really think there is only one way to get rid of him, and with
+ him of every annoyance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! that would be nice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Delicious! I had the honor, madam, of laying certain proposals at your
+ feet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh! yes&mdash;your letter, Sir Charles. I have only just had time to run
+ my eye down it. Let us examine it together.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She took out the letter with a wonderful appearance of interest, and the
+ diplomat allowed himself to fall into the absurd position to which she
+ invited him. They put their two heads together over the letter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'A coach, a country-house, pin-money'&mdash;and I'm so tired of houses
+ and coaches and pins. Oh! yes, here's something; what is this you offer
+ me, up in this corner?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles inspected the place carefully, and announced that it was &ldquo;his
+ heart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And he can't even write it!&rdquo; said she. &ldquo;That word is 'earth.' Ah! well,
+ you know best. There is your letter, Sir Charles.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She courtesied, returned him the letter, and resumed her study of
+ Lothario.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Favor me with your answer, madam,&rdquo; said her suitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have it,&rdquo; was the reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Madam, I don't understand your answer,&rdquo; said Sir Charles, stiffly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can't find you answers and understandings, too,&rdquo; was the lady-like
+ reply. &ldquo;You must beat my answer into your understanding while I beat this
+ man's verse into mine.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 'And like the birds, etc.'&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Pomander recovered himself a little; he laughed with quiet insolence.
+ &ldquo;Tell me,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;do you really refuse?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My good soul,&rdquo; said Mrs. Woffington, &ldquo;why this surprise! Are you so
+ ignorant of the stage and the world as not to know that I refuse such
+ offers as yours every week of my life?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know better,&rdquo; was the cool reply. She left it unnoticed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have so many of these,&rdquo; continued she, &ldquo;that I have begun to forget
+ they are insults.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this word the button broke off Sir Charles's foil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Insults, madam! They are the highest compliments you have left it in our
+ power to pay you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other took the button off her foil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed!&rdquo; cried she, with well-feigned surprise. &ldquo;Oh! I understand. To be
+ your mistress could be but a temporary disgrace; to be your wife would be
+ a lasting discredit,&rdquo; she continued. &ldquo;And now, sir, having played your
+ rival's game, and showed me your whole hand&rdquo; (a light broke in upon our
+ diplomat), &ldquo;do something to recover the reputation of a man of the world.
+ A gentleman is somewhere about in whom you have interested me by your lame
+ satire; pray tell him I am in the green-room, with no better companion
+ than this bad poet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles clinched his teeth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I accept the delicate commission,&rdquo; replied he, &ldquo;that you may see how
+ easily the man of the world drops what the rustic is eager to pick up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is better,&rdquo; said the actress, with a provoking appearance of
+ good-humor. &ldquo;You have a woman's tongue, if not her wit; but, my good
+ soul,&rdquo; added she, with cool <i>hauteur,</i> &ldquo;remember you have something
+ to do of more importance than anything you can say.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I accept your courteous dismissal, madam,&rdquo; said Pomander, grinding his
+ teeth. &ldquo;I will send a carpenter for your swain. And I leave you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He bowed to the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thanks for the double favor, good Sir Charles.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She courtesied to the floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Feminine vengeance! He had come between her and her love. All very clever,
+ Mrs. Actress; but was it wise?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am revenged,&rdquo; thought Mrs. Woffington, with a little feminine smirk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will be revenged,&rdquo; vowed Pomander, clinching his teeth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ COMPARE a November day with a May day. They are not more unlike than a
+ beautiful woman in company with a man she is indifferent to or averse, and
+ the same woman with the man of her heart by her side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At sight of Mr. Vane, all her coldness and <i>nonchalance</i> gave way to
+ a gentle complacency; and when she spoke to him, her voice, so clear and
+ cutting in the late <i>assaut d'armes,</i> sank of its own accord into the
+ most tender, delicious tone imaginable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Vane and she made love. He pleased her, and she desired to please him.
+ My reader knows her wit, her <i>finesse,</i> her fluency; but he cannot
+ conceive how god-like was her way of making love. I can put a few of the
+ corpses of her words upon paper, but where are the heavenly tones&mdash;now
+ calm and convincing, now soft and melancholy, now thrilling with
+ tenderness, now glowing with the fiery eloquence of passion? She told him
+ that she knew the map of his face; that for some days past he had been
+ subject to an influence adverse to her. She begged him, calmly, for his
+ own sake, to distrust false friends, and judge her by his own heart, eyes,
+ and judgment. He promised her he would.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I do trust you, in spite of them all,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;for your face is the
+ shrine of sincerity and candor. I alone know you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then she prayed him to observe the heartlessness of his sex, and to say
+ whether she had done ill to hide the riches of her heart from the cold and
+ shallow, and to keep them all for one honest man, &ldquo;who will be my friend,
+ I hope,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;as well as my lover.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said Vane, &ldquo;that is my ambition.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We actresses,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;make good the old proverb, 'Many lovers, but
+ few friends.' And oh, 'tis we who need a friend. Will you be mine?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While he lived, he would.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In turn, he begged her to be generous, and tell him the way for him,
+ Ernest Vane, inferior in wit and address to many of her admirers, to win
+ her heart from them all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This singular woman's answer is, I think, worth attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never act in my presence; never try to be eloquent, or clever; never
+ force a sentiment, or turn a phrase. Remember, I am the goddess of tricks.
+ Do not descend to competition with me and the Pomanders of the world. At
+ all littlenesses, you will ever be awkward in my eyes. And I am a woman. I
+ must have a superior to love&mdash;lie open to my eye. Light itself is not
+ more beautiful than the upright man, whose bosom is open to the day. Oh
+ yes! fear not you will be my superior, dear; for in me honesty has to
+ struggle against the habits of my art and life. Be simple and sincere, and
+ I shall love you, and bless the hour you shone upon my cold, artificial
+ life. Ah, Ernest!&rdquo; said she, fixing on his eye her own, the fire of which
+ melted into tenderness as she spoke, &ldquo;be my friend. Come between me and
+ the temptations of an unprotected life&mdash;the recklessness of a vacant
+ heart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He threw himself at her feet. He called her an angel. He told her he was
+ unworthy of her, but that he would try and deserve her. Then he hesitated,
+ and trembling he said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will be frank and loyal. Had I not better tell you everything? You will
+ not hate me for a confession I make myself?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall like you better&mdash;oh! so much better!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then I will own to you&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, do not tell me you have ever loved before me! I could not bear to
+ hear it!&rdquo; cried this inconsistent personage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other weak creature needed no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see plainly I never loved but you,&rdquo; said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let me hear that only!&rdquo; cried she; &ldquo;I am jealous even of the past. Say
+ you never loved but me. Never mind whether it is true. My child, you do
+ not even yet know love. Ernest, shall I make you love&mdash;as none of
+ your sex ever loved&mdash;with heart, and brain, and breath, and life, and
+ soul?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With these rapturous words, she poured the soul of love into his eyes; he
+ forgot everything in the world but her; he dissolved in present happiness
+ and vowed himself hers forever. And she, for her part, bade him but retain
+ her esteem and no woman ever went further in love than she would. She was
+ a true epicure. She had learned that passion, vulgar in itself, is
+ god-like when based upon esteem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This tender scene was interrupted by the call-boy, who brought Mrs.
+ Woffington a note from the manager, informing her there would be no
+ rehearsal. This left her at liberty, and she proceeded to take a somewhat
+ abrupt leave of Mr. Vane. He was endeavoring to persuade her to let him be
+ her companion until dinner-time (she was to be his quest), when Pomander
+ entered the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Woffington, however, was not to be persuaded, she excused herself on
+ the score of a duty which she said she had to perform, and whispering as
+ she passed Pomander, &ldquo;Keep your own counsel,&rdquo; she went out rather
+ precipitately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vane looked slightly disappointed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles, who had returned to see whether (as he fully expected) she
+ had told Vane everything&mdash;and who, at that moment, perhaps, would not
+ have been sorry had Mrs. Woffington's lover called him to serious account&mdash;finding
+ it was not her intention to make mischief, and not choosing to publish his
+ own defeat, dropped quietly into his old line, and determined to keep the
+ lovers in sight, and play for revenge. He smiled and said: &ldquo;My good sir,
+ nobody can hope to monopolize Mrs. Woffington. She has others to do
+ justice to besides you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To his surprise, Mr. Vane turned instantly round upon him, and, looking
+ him haughtily in the face, said: &ldquo;Sir Charles Pomander, the settled
+ malignity with which you pursue that lady is unmanly and offensive to me,
+ who love her. Let our acquaintance cease here, if you please, or let her
+ be sacred from your venomous tongue.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles bowed stiffly, and replied, that it was only due to himself to
+ withdraw a protection so little appreciated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two friends were in the very act of separating forever, when who
+ should run in but Pompey, the renegade. He darted up to Sir Charles, and
+ said: &ldquo;Massa Pomannah she in a coach, going to 10, Hercules Buildings. I'm
+ in a hurry, Massa Pomannah.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where?&rdquo; cried Pomander. &ldquo;Say that again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;10, Hercules Buildings, Lambeth. Me in a hurry, Massa Pomannah.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Faithful child, there's a guinea for thee. Fly!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The slave flew, and, taking a short cut, caught and fastened on to the
+ slow vehicle in the Strand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is a house of rendezvous,&rdquo; said Sir Charles, half to himself, half to
+ Mr. Vane. He repeated in triumph: &ldquo;It is a house of rendezvous.&rdquo; He then,
+ recovering his <i>sang-froid,</i> and treating it all as a matter of
+ course, explained that at 10, Hercules Buildings, was a fashionable shop,
+ with entrances from two streets; that the best Indian scarfs and shawls
+ were sold there, and that ladies kept their carriages waiting an immense
+ time in the principal street, while they were supposed to be in the shop,
+ or the show-room. He then went on to say that he had only this morning
+ heard that the intimacy between Mrs. Woffington and a Colonel Murthwaite,
+ although publicly broken off for prudential reasons, was still
+ clandestinely carried on. She had, doubtless, slipped away to meet the
+ colonel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Vane turned pale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No! I will not suspect. I will not dog her like a bloodhound,&rdquo; cried he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will!&rdquo; said Pomander.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You! By what right?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The right of curiosity. I will know whether it is you who are imposed on,
+ or whether you are right, and all the world is deceived in this woman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He ran out; but, for all his speed, when he got into the street there was
+ the jealous lover at his elbow. They darted with all speed into the
+ Strand; got a coach. Sir Charles, on the box, gave Jehu a guinea, and took
+ the reins&mdash;and by a Niagara of whipcord they attained Lambeth; and at
+ length, to his delight, Pomander saw another coach before him with a
+ gold-laced black slave behind it. The coach stopped; and the slave came to
+ the door. The shop in question was a few hundred yards distant. The adroit
+ Sir Charles not only stopped but turned his coach, and let the horses
+ crawl back toward London; he also flogged the side panels to draw the
+ attention of Mr. Vane. That gentleman looked through the little circular
+ window at the back of the vehicle, and saw a lady paying the coachman.
+ There was no mistaking her figure. This lady, then, followed at a distance
+ by her slave, walked on toward Hercules Buildings; and it was his
+ miserable fate to see her look uneasily round, and at last glide in at a
+ side door, close to the silk-mercer's shop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The carriage stopped. Sir Charles came himself to the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, Vane,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;before I consent to go any further in this
+ business, you must promise me to be cool and reasonable. I abhor
+ absurdity; and there must be no swords drawn for this little hypocrite.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I submit to no dictation,&rdquo; said Vane, white as a sheet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have benefited so far by my knowledge,&rdquo; said the other politely; &ldquo;let
+ me, who am self-possessed, claim some influence with you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Forgive me!&rdquo; said poor Vane. &ldquo;My ang&mdash;my sorrow that such an angel
+ should be a monster of deceit.&rdquo; He could say no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They walked to the shop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How she peeped, this way and that,&rdquo; said Pomander, &ldquo;sly little Woffy!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No! on second thoughts,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;it is the other street we must
+ reconnoiter; and, if we don't see her there, we will enter the shop, and
+ by dint of this purse we shall soon untie the knot of the Woffington
+ riddle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vane leaned heavily on his tormentor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am faint,&rdquo; said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lean on me, my dear friend,&rdquo; said Sir Charles. &ldquo;Your weakness will leave
+ you in the next street.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the next street they discovered&mdash;nothing. In the shop, they found&mdash;no
+ Mrs. Woffington. They returned to the principal street. Vane began to hope
+ there was no positive evidence. Suddenly three stories up a fiddle was
+ heard. Pomander took no notice, but Vane turned red; this put Sir Charles
+ upon the scent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay!&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Is not that an Irish tune?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vane groaned. He covered his face with his hands, and hissed out:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is her favorite tune.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aha!&rdquo; said Pomander. &ldquo;Follow me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They crept up the stairs, Pomander in advance; they heard the signs of an
+ Irish orgie&mdash;a rattling jig played and danced with the inspiriting
+ interjections of that frolicsome nation. These sounds ceased after a
+ while, and Pomander laid his hand on his friend's shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I prepare you,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;for what you are sure to see. This woman was an
+ Irish bricklayer's daughter, and 'what is bred in the bone never comes out
+ of the flesh;' you will find her sitting on some Irishman's knee, whose
+ limbs are ever so much stouter than yours. You are the man of her head,
+ and this is the man of her heart. These things would be monstrous, if they
+ were not common; incredible, if we did not see them every day. But this
+ poor fellow, whom probably she deceives as well as you, is not to be
+ sacrificed like a dog to your unjust wrath; he is as superior to her as
+ you are to him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will commit no violence,&rdquo; said Vane. &ldquo;I still hope she is innocent.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pomander smiled, and said he hoped so too.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And if she is what you think, I will but show her she is known, and,
+ blaming myself as much as her&mdash;oh yes! more than her!&mdash;I will go
+ down this night to Shropshire, and never speak word to her again in this
+ world or the next.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good,&rdquo; said Sir Charles.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;'Le bruit est pour le fat, la plainte est pour le sot,
+ L'honndete homine trompe s'eloigne et ne dit mot.'
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Are you ready?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then follow me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Turning the handle gently, he opened the door like lightning, and was in
+ the room. Vane's head peered over his shoulder. She was actually there!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For once in her life, the cautious, artful woman was taken by surprise.
+ She gave a little scream, and turned as red as fire. But Sir Charles
+ surprised somebody else even more than he did poor Mrs. Woffington.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be impertinent to tantalize my reader, but I flatter myself this
+ history is not written with power enough to do that, and I may venture to
+ leave him to guess whom Sir Charles Pomander surprised more than he did
+ the actress, while I go back for the lagging sheep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ JAMES TRIPLET, water in his eye, but fire in his heart, went home on
+ wings. Arrived there, he anticipated curiosity by informing all hands he
+ should answer no questions. Only in the intervals of a work, which was to
+ take the family out of all its troubles, he should gradually unfold a
+ tale, verging on the marvelous&mdash;a tale whose only fault was, that
+ fiction, by which alone the family could hope to be great, paled beside
+ it. He then seized some sheets of paper fished out some old dramatic
+ sketches, and a list of <i>dramatis personae,</i> prepared years ago, and
+ plunged into a comedy. As he wrote, true to his promise, he painted,
+ Triplet-wise, that story which we have coldly related, and made it appear,
+ to all but Mrs. Triplet, that he was under the tutela, or express
+ protection of Mrs. Woffington, who would push his fortunes until the only
+ difficulty would be to keep arrogance out of the family heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Triplet groaned aloud. &ldquo;You have brought the picture home, I see,&rdquo;
+ said she.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course I have. She is going to give me a sitting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At what hour, of what day?&rdquo; said Mrs. Triplet, with a world of meaning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She did not say,&rdquo; replied Triplet, avoiding his wife's eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know she did not,&rdquo; was the answer. &ldquo;I would rather you had brought me
+ the ten shillings than this fine story,&rdquo; said she.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wife!&rdquo; said Triplet, &ldquo;don't put me into a frame of mind in which
+ successful comedies are not written.&rdquo; He scribbled away; but his wife's
+ despondency told upon the man of disappointments. Then he stuck fast; then
+ he became fidgety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do keep those children quiet!&rdquo; said the father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush, my dears,&rdquo; said the mother; &ldquo;let your father write. Comedy seems to
+ give you more trouble than tragedy, James,&rdquo; added she, soothingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; was his answer. &ldquo;Sorrow comes somehow more natural to me; but for
+ all that I have got a bright thought, Mrs. Triplet. Listen, all of you.
+ You see, Jane, they are all at a sumptuous banquet, all the <i>dramatis
+ personae,</i> except the poet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet went on writing, and reading his work out: &ldquo;Music, sparkling wine,
+ massive plate, rose-water in the hand-glasses, soup, fish&mdash;shall I
+ have three sorts of fish? I will; they are cheap in this market. Ah!
+ Fortune, you wretch, here at least I am your master, and I'll make you
+ know it&mdash;venison,&rdquo; wrote Triplet, with a malicious grin, &ldquo;game,
+ pickles and provocatives in the center of the table; then up jumps one of
+ the guests, and says he&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh dear, I am so hungry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was not from the comedy, but from one of the boys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And so am I,&rdquo; cried a girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is an absurd remark, Lysimachus,&rdquo; said Triplet with a suspicious
+ calmness. &ldquo;How can a boy be hungry three hours after breakfast?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, father, there was no breakfast for breakfast.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now I ask you, Mrs. Triplet,&rdquo; appealed the author, &ldquo;how I am to write
+ comic scenes if you let Lysimachus and Roxalana here put the heavy
+ business in every five minutes?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Forgive them; the poor things are hungry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then let them be hungry in another room,&rdquo; said the irritated scribe.
+ &ldquo;They shan't cling round my pen, and paralyze it, just when it is going to
+ make all our fortunes; but you women,&rdquo; snapped Triplet the Just, &ldquo;have no
+ consideration for people's feelings. Send them all to bed; every man Jack
+ of them!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finding the conversation taking this turn, the brats raised a unanimous
+ howl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet darted a fierce glance at them. &ldquo;Hungry, hungry,&rdquo; cried he; &ldquo;is
+ that a proper expression to use before a father who is sitting down here,
+ all gayety&rdquo; (scratching wildly with his pen) &ldquo;and hilarity&rdquo; (scratch) &ldquo;to
+ write a com&mdash;com&mdash;&rdquo; he choked a moment; then in a very different
+ voice, all sadness and tenderness, he said: &ldquo;Where's the youngest&mdash;where's
+ Lucy? As if I didn't know you are hungry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucy came to him directly. He took her on his knee, pressed her gently to
+ his side, and wrote silently. The others were still.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Father,&rdquo; said Lucy, aged five, the germ of a woman, &ldquo;I am not very
+ hungry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I am not hungry at all,&rdquo; said bluff Lysimachus, taking his sister's
+ cue; then going upon his own tact he added, &ldquo;I had a great piece of bread
+ and butter yesterday!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wife, they will drive me mad!&rdquo; and he dashed at the paper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second boy explained to his mother, <i>sotto voce:</i> &ldquo;Mother, he <i>made</i>
+ us hungry out of his book.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is a beautiful book,&rdquo; said Lucy. &ldquo;Is it a cookery book?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet roared: &ldquo;Do you hear that?&rdquo; inquired he, all trace of ill-humor
+ gone. &ldquo;Wife,&rdquo; he resumed, after a gallant scribble, &ldquo;I took that sermon I
+ wrote.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And beautiful it was, James. I'm sure it quite cheered me up with
+ thinking that we shall all be dead before so very long.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, the reverend gentleman would not have it. He said it was too hard
+ upon sin. 'You run at the Devil like a mad bull,' said he. 'Sell it in
+ Lambeth, sir; here calmness and decency are before everything,' says he.
+ 'My congregation expect to go to heaven down hill. Perhaps the chaplain of
+ Newgate might give you a crown for it,' said he,&rdquo; and Triplet dashed
+ viciously at the paper. &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; sighed he, &ldquo;if my friend Mrs. Woffington
+ would but drop these stupid comedies and take to tragedy, this house would
+ soon be all smiles.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh James!&rdquo; replied Mrs. Triplet, almost peevishly, &ldquo;how can you expect
+ anything but fine words from that woman? You won't believe what all the
+ world says. You will trust to your own good heart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I haven't a good heart,&rdquo; said the poor, honest fellow. &ldquo;I spoke like a
+ brute to you just now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind, James,&rdquo; said the woman. &ldquo;I wonder how you put up with me at
+ all&mdash;a sick, useless creature. I often wish to die, for your sake. I
+ know you would do better. I am such a weight round your neck.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man made no answer, but he put Lucy gently down, and went to the
+ woman, and took her forehead to his bosom, and held it there; and after a
+ while returned with silent energy to his comedy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Play us a tune on the fiddle, father.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, do, husband. That helps you often in your writing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lysimachus brought him the fiddle, and Triplet essayed a merry tune; but
+ it came out so doleful, that he shook his head, and laid the instrument
+ down. Music must be in the heart, or it will come out of the fingers&mdash;notes,
+ not music.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;let us be serious and finish this comedy slap off. Perhaps
+ it hitches because I forgot to invoke the comic muse. She must be a
+ black-hearted jade, if she doesn't come with merry notions to a poor
+ devil, starving in the midst of his hungry little ones.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are past help from heathen goddesses,&rdquo; said the woman. &ldquo;We must pray
+ to Heaven to look down upon us and our children.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man looked up with a very bad expression on his countenance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You forget,&rdquo; said he sullenly, &ldquo;our street is very narrow, and the
+ opposite houses are very high.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;James!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How can Heaven be expected to see what honest folk endure in so dark a
+ hole as this?&rdquo; cried the man, fiercely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;James,&rdquo; said the woman, with fear and sorrow, &ldquo;what words are these?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man rose and flung his pen upon the floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have we given honesty a fair trial&mdash;yes or no?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No!&rdquo; said the woman, without a moment's hesitation; &ldquo;not till we die, as
+ we have lived. Heaven is higher than the sky; children,&rdquo; said she, lest
+ perchance her husband's words should have harmed their young souls, &ldquo;the
+ sky is above the earth, and heaven is higher than the sky; and Heaven is
+ just.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose it is so,&rdquo; said the man, a little cowed by her. &ldquo;Everybody says
+ so. I think so, at bottom, myself; but I can't see it. I want to see it,
+ but I can't!&rdquo; cried he, fiercely. &ldquo;Have my children offended Heaven? They
+ will starve&mdash;they will die! If I was Heaven, I'd be just, and send an
+ angel to take these children's part. They cried to me for bread&mdash;I
+ had no bread; so I gave them hard words. The moment I had done that I knew
+ it was all over. God knows it took a long while to break my heart; but it
+ is broken at last; quite, quite broken! broken! broken!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the poor thing laid his head upon the table, and sobbed, beyond all
+ power of restraint. The children cried round him, scarce knowing why; and
+ Mrs. Triplet could only say, &ldquo;My poor husband!&rdquo; and prayed and wept upon
+ the couch where she lay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was at this juncture that a lady, who had knocked gently and unheard,
+ opened the door, and with a light step entered the apartment; but no
+ sooner had she caught sight of Triplet's anguish, than, saying hastily,
+ &ldquo;Stay, I forgot something,&rdquo; she made as hasty an exit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This gave Triplet a moment to recover himself; and Mrs. Woffington, whose
+ lynx eye had comprehended all at a glance, and who had determined at once
+ what line to take, came flying in again, saying:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wasn't somebody inquiring for an angel? Here I am. See, Mr. Triplet;&rdquo; and
+ she showed him a note, which said: &ldquo;Madam, you are an angel. From a
+ perfect stranger,&rdquo; explained she; &ldquo;so it must be true.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mrs. Woffington,&rdquo; said Mr. Triplet to his wife. Mrs. Woffington planted
+ herself in the middle of the floor, and with a comical glance, setting her
+ arms akimbo, uttered a shrill whistle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now you will see another angel&mdash;there are two sorts of them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pompey came in with a basket; she took it from him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lucifer, avaunt!&rdquo; cried she, in a terrible tone, that drove him to the
+ wall; &ldquo;and wait outside the door,&rdquo; added she, conversationally.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I heard you were ill, ma'am, and I have brought you some physic&mdash;black
+ draughts from Burgundy;&rdquo; and she smiled. And, recovered from their first
+ surprise, young and old began to thaw beneath that witching, irresistible
+ smile. &ldquo;Mrs. Triplet, I have come to give your husband a sitting; will you
+ allow me to eat my little luncheon with you? I am so hungry.&rdquo; Then she
+ clapped her hands, and in ran Pompey. She sent him for a pie she professed
+ to have fallen in love with at the corner of the street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mother,&rdquo; said Alcibiades, &ldquo;will the lady give me a bit of her pie?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush! you rude boy!&rdquo; cried the mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She is not much of a lady if she does not,&rdquo; cried Mrs. Woffington. &ldquo;Now,
+ children, first let us look at&mdash;ahem&mdash;a comedy. Nineteen <i>dramatis
+ personae!</i> What do you say, children, shall we cut out seven, or nine?
+ that is the question. You can't bring your armies into our drawing-rooms,
+ Mr. Dagger-and-bowl. Are you the Marlborough of comedy? Can you marshal
+ battalions on a turkey carpet, and make gentlefolks witty in platoons?
+ What is this in the first act? A duel, and both wounded! You butcher!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They are not to die, ma'am!&rdquo; cried Triplet, deprecatingly &ldquo;upon my
+ honor,&rdquo; said he, solemnly, spreading his bands on his bosom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you think I'll trust their lives with you? No! Give me a pen; this is
+ the way we run people through the body.&rdquo; Then she wrote (&ldquo;business.&rdquo;
+ Araminta looks out of the garret window. Combatants drop their swords, put
+ their hands to their hearts, and stagger off O. P. and P. S.) &ldquo;Now,
+ children, who helps me to lay the cloth?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I!&rdquo; (The children run to the cupboard.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Mrs. Triplet</i> (half rising). &ldquo;Madam, I&mdash;can't think of allowing
+ you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Woffington replied: &ldquo;Sit down, madam, or I must use brute force. If
+ you are ill, be ill&mdash;till I make you well. Twelve plates, quick!
+ Twenty-four knives, quicker! Forty-eight forks quickest!&rdquo; She met the
+ children with the cloth and laid it; then she met them again and laid
+ knives and forks, all at full gallop, which mightily excited the bairns.
+ Pompey came in with the pie, Mrs. Woffington took it and set it before
+ Triplet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Mrs. Woffington.</i> &ldquo;Your coat, Mr. Triplet, if you please.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Mr. Triplet.</i> &ldquo;My coat, madam!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Mrs. Woffington.</i> &ldquo;Yes, off with it&mdash;there's a hole in it&mdash;and
+ carve.&rdquo; Then she whipped to the other end of the table and stitched like
+ wild-fire. &ldquo;Be pleased to cast your eyes on that, Mrs. Triplet. Pass it to
+ the lady, young gentleman. Fire away, Mr. Triplet, never mind us women.
+ Woffington's housewife, ma'am, fearful to the eye, only it holds
+ everything in the world, and there is a small space for everything else&mdash;to
+ be returned by the bearer. Thank you, sir.&rdquo; (Stitches away like lightning
+ at the coat.) &ldquo;Eat away, children! now is your time; when once I begin,
+ the pie will soon end; I do everything so quick.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Roxalana.</i> &ldquo;The lady sews quicker than you, mother.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Woffington.</i> &ldquo;Bless the child, don't come so near my sword-arm; the
+ needle will go into your eye, and out at the back of your head.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This nonsense made the children giggle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The needle will be lost&mdash;the child no more&mdash;enter undertaker&mdash;house
+ turned topsy-turvy&mdash;father shows Woffington to the door&mdash;off she
+ goes with a face as long and dismal as some people's comedies&mdash;no
+ names&mdash;crying fine chan-ey oranges.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The children, all but Lucy, screeched with laughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucy said gravely:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mother, the lady is very funny.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You will be as funny when you are as well paid for it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This just hit poor Trip's notion of humor, and he began to choke, with his
+ mouth full of pie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;James, take care,&rdquo; said Mrs. Triplet, sad and solemn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ James looked up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My wife is a good woman, madam,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;but deficient in an important
+ particular.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, James!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, my dear. I regret to say you have no sense of humor; nummore than a
+ cat, Jane.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! because the poor thing can't laugh at your comedy?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, ma'am; but she laughs at nothing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Try her with one of your tragedies, my lad.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sure, James,&rdquo; said the poor, good, lackadaisical woman, &ldquo;if I don't
+ laugh, it is not for want of the will. I used to be a very hearty
+ laugher,&rdquo; whined she; &ldquo;but I haven't laughed this two years.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, indeed!&rdquo; said the Woffington. &ldquo;Then the next two years you shall do
+ nothing else.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, madam!&rdquo; said Triplet. &ldquo;That passes the art, even of the great
+ comedian.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Does it?&rdquo; said the actress, coolly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Lucy.</i> &ldquo;She is not a comedy lady. You don't ever cry, pretty lady?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Woffington</i> (ironically). &ldquo;Oh, of course not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Lucy</i> (confidentially). &ldquo;Comedy is crying. Father cried all the time
+ he was writing his one.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet turned red as fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold your tongue,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;I was bursting with merriment. Wife, our
+ children talk too much; they put their noses into everything, and
+ criticise their own father.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Unnatural offspring!&rdquo; laughed the visitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And when they take up a notion, Socrates couldn't convince them to the
+ contrary. For instance, madam, all this morning they thought fit to assume
+ that they were starving.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So we were,&rdquo; said Lysimachus, &ldquo;until the angel came; and the devil went
+ for the pie.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There&mdash;there&mdash;there! Now, you mark my words; we shall never get
+ that idea out of their heads&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Until,&rdquo; said Mrs. Woffington, lumping a huge cut of pie into Roxalana's
+ plate, &ldquo;we put a very different idea into their stomachs.&rdquo; This and the
+ look she cast on Mrs. Triplet fairly caught that good, though somber
+ personage. She giggled; put her hand to her face, and said: &ldquo;I'm sure I
+ ask your pardon, ma'am.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was no use; the comedian had determined they should all laugh, and they
+ were made to laugh. Then she rose, and showed them how to drink healths <i>a
+ la Francaise;</i> and keen were her little admirers to touch her glass
+ with theirs. And the pure wine she had brought did Mrs. Triplet much good,
+ too; though not so much as the music and sunshine of her face and voice.
+ Then, when their stomachs were full of good food, and the soul of the
+ grape tingled in their veins, and their souls glowed under her great
+ magnetic power, she suddenly seized the fiddle, and showed them another of
+ her enchantments. She put it on her knee, and played a tune that would
+ have made gout, cholic and phthisic dance upon their last legs. She played
+ to the eye as well as to the ear, with such a smart gesture of the bow,
+ and such a radiance of face as she looked at them, that whether the music
+ came out of her wooden shell, or her horse-hair wand, or her bright self,
+ seemed doubtful. They pranced on their chairs; they could not keep still.
+ She jumped up; so did they. She gave a wild Irish horroo. She put the
+ fiddle in Triplet's hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The wind that shakes the barley, ye divil!&rdquo; cried she.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet went <i>hors de lui;</i> he played like Paganini, or an
+ intoxicated demon. Woffington covered the buckle in gallant style; she
+ danced, the children danced. Triplet fiddled and danced, and flung his
+ limbs in wild dislocation: the wineglasses danced; and last, Mrs. Triplet
+ was observed to be bobbing about on her sofa, in a monstrous absurd way,
+ droning out the tune, and playing her hands with mild enjoyment, all to
+ herself. Woffington pointed out this pantomimic soliloquy to the two boys,
+ with a glance full of fiery meaning. This was enough. With a fiendish
+ yell, they fell upon her, and tore her, shrieking, off the sofa. And lo!
+ when she was once launched, she danced up to her husband, and set to him
+ with a meek deliberation that was as funny as any part of the scene. So
+ then the mover of all this slipped on one side, and let the stone of
+ merriment&mdash;roll&mdash;and roll it did; there was no swimming,
+ sprawling, or irrelevant frisking; their feet struck the ground for every
+ note of the fiddle, pat as its echo, their faces shone, their hearts
+ leaped, and their poor frozen natures came out, and warmed themselves at
+ the glowing melody; a great sunbeam had come into their abode, and these
+ human motes danced in it. The elder ones recovered their gravity first,
+ they sat down breathless, and put their hands to their hearts; they looked
+ at one another, and then at the goddess who had revived them. Their first
+ feeling was wonder; were they the same, who, ten minutes ago, were weeping
+ together? Yes! ten minutes ago they were rayless, joyless, hopeless. Now
+ the sun was in their hearts, and sorrow and sighing were fled, as fogs
+ disperse before the god of day. It was magical; could a mortal play upon
+ the soul of man, woman and child like this? Happy Woffington! and suppose
+ this was more than half acting, but such acting as Triplet never dreamed
+ of; and to tell the honest, simple truth, I myself should not have
+ suspected it; but children are sharper than one would think, and
+ Alcibiades Triplet told, in after years, that, when they were all dancing
+ except the lady, he caught sight of her face&mdash;and it was quite, quite
+ grave, and even sad; but, as often as she saw him look at her, she smiled
+ at him so gayly&mdash;he couldn't believe it was the same face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If it was art, glory be to such art so worthily applied! and honor to such
+ creatures as this, that come like sunshine into poor men's houses, and
+ tune drooping hearts to daylight and hope!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wonder of these worthy people soon changed to gratitude. Mrs.
+ Woffington stopped their mouths at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no!&rdquo; cried she; &ldquo;if you really love me, no scenes; I hate them. Tell
+ these brats to kiss me, and let me go. I must sit for my picture after
+ dinner; it is a long way to Bloomsbury Square.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The children needed no bidding; they clustered round her, and poured out
+ their innocent hearts as children only do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall pray for you after father and mother,&rdquo; said one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall pray for you after daily bread,&rdquo; said Lucy, &ldquo;because we were <i>tho</i>
+ hungry till you came!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My poor children!&rdquo; cried Woffington, and hard to grown-up actors, as she
+ called us, but sensitive to children, she fairly melted as she embraced
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was at this precise juncture that the door was unceremoniously opened,
+ and the two gentlemen burst upon the scene!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My reader now guesses whom Sir Charles Pomander surprised more than he did
+ Mrs. Woffington. He could not for the life of him comprehend what she was
+ doing, and what was her ulterior object. The <i>nil admirari</i> of the
+ fine gentleman deserted him, and he gazed open-mouthed, like the veriest
+ chaw-bacon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The actress, unable to extricate herself in a moment from the children,
+ stood there like Charity, in New College Chapel, while the mother kissed
+ her hand, and the father quietly dropped tears, like some leaden water god
+ in the middle of a fountain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vane turned hot and cold by turns, with joy and shame. Pomander's genius
+ came to the aid of their embarrassment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Follow my lead,&rdquo; whispered he. &ldquo;What! Mrs. Woffington here!&rdquo; cried he;
+ then he advanced business-like to Triplet. &ldquo;We are aware, sir, of your
+ various talents, and are come to make a demand on them. I, sir, am the
+ unfortunate possessor of frescoes; time has impaired their indelicacy, no
+ man can restore it as you can.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Augh! sir! sir!&rdquo; said the gratified goose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My Cupid's bows are walking-sticks, and my Venus's noses are snubbed. You
+ must set all that straight on your own terms, Mr. Triplet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In a single morning all shall bloom again, sir! Whom would you wish them
+ to resemble in feature? I have lately been praised for my skill in
+ portraiture.&rdquo; (Glancing at Mrs. Woffington.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; said Pomander, carelessly, &ldquo;you need not go far for Venuses and
+ Cupids, I suppose?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see, sir; my wife and children. Thank you, sir; thank you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pomander stared; Mrs. Woffington laughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it was Vane's turn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let me have a copy of verses from your pen. I shall have five pounds at
+ your disposal for them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The world has found me out!&rdquo; thought Triplet, blinded by his vanity.&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The subject, sir?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No matter,&rdquo; said Vane&mdash;&ldquo;no matter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, of course it does not matter to me,&rdquo; said Triplet, with some <i>hauteur,</i>
+ and assuming poetic omnipotence. &ldquo;Only, when one knows the subject, one
+ can sometimes make the verses apply better.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Write then, since you are so confident, upon Mrs. Woffington.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! that is a subject! They shall be ready in an hour!&rdquo; cried Trip, in
+ whose imagination Parnassus was a raised counter. He had in a teacup some
+ lines on Venus and Mars which he could not but feel would fit Thalia and
+ Croesus, or Genius and Envy, equally well. &ldquo;In one hour, sir,&rdquo; said
+ Triplet, &ldquo;the article shall be executed, and delivered at your house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Woffington called Vane to her, with an engaging smile. A month ago he
+ would have hoped she would not have penetrated him and Sir Charles; but he
+ knew her better now. He came trembling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look me in the face, Mr. Vane,&rdquo; said she, gently, but firmly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I cannot!&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;How can I ever look you in the face again?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! you disarm me! But I must strike you, or this will never end. Did I
+ not promise that, when you had earned my <i>if</i> esteem, I would tell
+ you&mdash;what no mortal knows&mdash;Ernest, my whole story? I delay the
+ confession. It will cost me so many blushes, so many tears! And yet I
+ hope, if you knew all, you would pity and forgive me. Meantime, did I ever
+ tell you a falsehood?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh no!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why doubt me then, when I tell you that I hold all your sex cheap but
+ you? Why suspect me of Heaven knows what, at the dictation of a heartless,
+ brainless fop&mdash;on the word of a known liar, like the world?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Black lightning flashed from her glorious eyes as she administered this
+ royal rebuke. Vane felt what a poor creature he was, and his face showed
+ such burning shame and contrition, that he obtained his pardon without
+ speaking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There,&rdquo; said she, kindly, &ldquo;do not let us torment one another. I forgive
+ you. Let me make you happy, Ernest. Is that a great favor to ask? I can
+ make you happier than your brightest dream of happiness, if you will let
+ yourself be happy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They rejoined the others; but Vane turned his back on Pomander, and would
+ not look at him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Charles,&rdquo; said Mrs. Woffington gayly; for she scorned to admit the
+ fine gentleman to the rank of a permanent enemy, &ldquo;you will be of our
+ party, I trust, at dinner?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, no, madam; I fear I cannot give myself that pleasure to-day.&rdquo; Sir
+ Charles did not choose to swell the triumph. &ldquo;Mr. Vane, good day!&rdquo; said
+ he, rather dryly. &ldquo;Mr. Triplet&mdash;madam&mdash;your most obedient!&rdquo; and,
+ self-possessed at top, but at bottom crestfallen, he bowed himself away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles, however, on descending the stair and gaining the street,
+ caught sight of a horseman, riding uncertainly about, and making his horse
+ curvet, to attract attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He soon recognized one of his own horses, and upon it the servant he had
+ left behind to dog that poor innocent country lady. The servant sprang off
+ his horse and touched his hat. He informed his master that he had kept
+ with the carriage until ten o'clock this morning, when he had ridden away
+ from it at Barnet, having duly pumped the servants as opportunity offered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who is she?&rdquo; cried Sir Charles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wife of a Cheshire squire, Sir Charles,&rdquo; was the reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His name? Whither goes she in town?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Her name is Mrs. Vane, Sir Charles. She is going to her husband.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Curious!&rdquo; cried Sir Charles. &ldquo;I wish she had no husband. No! I wish she
+ came from Shropshire,&rdquo; and he chuckled at the notion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you please, Sir Charles,&rdquo; said the man, &ldquo;is not Willoughby in
+ Cheshire?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; cried his master; &ldquo;it is in Shropshire. What! eh! Five guineas for
+ you if that lady comes from Willoughby in Shropshire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is where she comes from then, Sir Charles, and she is going to
+ Bloomsbury Square.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How long have they been married?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not more than twelve months, Sir Charles.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pomander gave the man ten guineas instead of five on the spot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reader, it was too true! Mr. Vane&mdash;the good, the decent, the
+ churchgoer&mdash;Mr. Vane, whom Mrs. Woffington had selected to improve
+ her morals&mdash;Mr. Vane was a married man!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ As soon as Pomander had drawn his breath and realized this discovery, he
+ darted upstairs, and with all the demure calmness he could assume, told
+ Mr. Vane, whom he met descending, that he was happy to find his
+ engagements permitted him to join the party in Bloomsbury Square. He then
+ flung himself upon his servant's horse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like Iago, he saw the indistinct outline of a glorious and a most
+ malicious plot; it lay crude in his head and heart at present; thus much
+ he saw clearly, that, if he could time Mrs. Vane's arrival so that she
+ should pounce upon the Woffington at her husband's table, he might be
+ present at and enjoy the public discomfiture of a man and woman who had
+ wounded his vanity. Bidding his servant make the best of his way to
+ Bloomsbury Square, Sir Charles galloped in that direction himself,
+ intending first to inquire whether Mrs. Vane was arrived, and, if not, to
+ ride toward Islington and meet her. His plan was frustrated by an
+ accident; galloping round a corner, his horse did not change his leg
+ cleverly, and, the pavement being also loose, slipped and fell on his
+ side, throwing his rider upon the <i>trottoir.</i> The horse got up and
+ trembled violently, but was unhurt. The rider lay motionless, except that
+ his legs quivered on the pavement. They took him up and conveyed him into
+ a druggist's shop, the master of which practiced chirurgery. He had to be
+ sent for; and, before he could be found, Sir Charles recovered his reason,
+ so much so, that when the chirurgeon approached with his fleam to bleed
+ him, according to the practice of the day, the patient drew his sword, and
+ assured the other he would let out every drop of blood in his body if he
+ touched him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He of the shorter but more lethal weapon hastily retreated. Sir Charles
+ flung a guinea on the counter, and mounting his horse rode him off rather
+ faster than before this accident.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a dead silence!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I believe that gentleman to be the Devil!&rdquo; said a thoughtful bystander.
+ The crowd (it was a century ago) assented <i>nem. con.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles, arrived in Bloomsbury Square, found that the whole party was
+ assembled. He therefore ordered his servant to parade before the door,
+ and, if he saw Mrs. Vane's carriage enter the Square, to let him know, if
+ possible, before she should reach the house. On entering he learned that
+ Mr. Vane and his guests were in the garden (a very fine one), and joined
+ them there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Vane demands another chapter, in which I will tell the reader who she
+ was, and what excuse her husband had for his liaison with Margaret
+ Woffington.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ MABEL CHESTER was the beauty and toast of South Shropshire. She had
+ refused the hand of half the country squires in a circle of some dozen
+ miles, till at last Mr. Vane became her suitor. Besides a handsome face
+ and person, Mr. Vane had accomplishments his rivals did not possess. He
+ read poetry to her on mossy banks an hour before sunset, and awakened
+ sensibilities which her other suitors shocked, and they them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lovely Mabel had a taste for beautiful things, without any excess of
+ that severe quality called judgment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I will explain. If you or I, reader, had read to her in the afternoon,
+ amid the smell of roses and eglantine, the chirp of the mavis, the hum of
+ bees, the twinkling of butterflies, and the tinkle of distant sheep,
+ something that combined all these sights, and sounds, and smells&mdash;say
+ Milton's musical picture of Eden, P. L., lib. 3, and after that &ldquo;Triplet
+ on Kew,&rdquo; she would have instantly pronounced in favor of &ldquo;Eden&rdquo;; but if <i>we</i>
+ had read her &ldquo;Milton,&rdquo; and Mr. Vane had read her &ldquo;Triplet,&rdquo; she would have
+ as unhesitatingly preferred &ldquo;Kew&rdquo; to &ldquo;Paradise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was a true daughter of Eve; the lady, who, when an angel was telling
+ her and her husband the truths of heaven in heaven's own music, slipped
+ away into the kitchen, because she preferred hearing the story at
+ second-hand, encumbered with digressions, and in mortal but marital
+ accents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When her mother, who guarded Mabel like a dragon, told her Mr. Vane was
+ not rich enough, and she really must not give him so many opportunities,
+ Mabel cried and embraced the dragon, and said, &ldquo;Oh, mother!&rdquo; The dragon,
+ finding her ferocity dissolving, tried to shake her off, but the goose
+ would cry and embrace the dragon till it melted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By and by Mr. Vane's uncle died suddenly and left him the great Stoken
+ Church estate, and a trunk full of Jacobuses and Queen Anne's guineas&mdash;his
+ own hoard and his father's&mdash;then the dragon spake comfortably and
+ said: &ldquo;My child, he is now the richest man in Shropshire. He will not
+ think of you now; so steel your heart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Mabel, contrary to all expectations, did not cry; but, with flushing
+ cheek, pledged her life upon Ernest's love and honor: and Ernest, as soon
+ as the funeral, etc., left him free, galloped to Mabel, to talk of our
+ good fortune. The dragon had done him injustice; that was not his weak
+ point. So they were married! and they were very, very happy. But, one
+ month after, the dragon died, and that was their first grief; but they
+ bore it together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Vane was not like the other Shropshire squires. His idea of pleasure
+ was something his wife could share. He still rode, walked, and sat with
+ her, and read to her, and composed songs for her, and about her, which she
+ played and sang prettily enough, in her quiet, lady-like way, and in a
+ voice of honey dropping from the comb. Then she kept a keen eye upon him;
+ and, when she discovered what dishes he liked, she superintended those
+ herself; and, observing that he never failed to eat of a certain
+ lemon-pudding the dragon had originated, she always made this pudding
+ herself, and she never told her husband she made it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first seven months of their marriage was more like blue sky than brown
+ earth; and if any one had told Mabel that her husband was a mortal, and
+ not an angel, sent to her that her days and nights might be unmixed,
+ uninterrupted heaven, she could hardly have realized the information.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When a vexatious litigant began to contest the will by which Mr. Vane was
+ Lord of Stoken Church, and Mr. Vane went up to London to concert the
+ proper means of defeating this attack, Mrs. Vane would gladly have
+ compounded by giving the man two or three thousand acres or the whole
+ estate, if he wouldn't take less, not to rob her of her husband for a
+ month; but she was docile, as she was amorous; so she cried (out of sight)
+ a week; and let her darling go with every misgiving a loving heart could
+ have; but one! and that one her own heart told her was impossible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The month rolled away&mdash;no symptom of a return. For this, Mr. Vane was
+ not, in fact, to blame; but, toward the end of the next month, business
+ became a convenient excuse. When three months had passed, Mrs. Vane became
+ unhappy. She thought he too must feel the separation. She offered to come
+ to him. He answered uncandidly. He urged the length, the fatigue of the
+ journey. She was silenced; but some time later she began to take a new
+ view of his objections. &ldquo;He is so self-denying,&rdquo; said she. &ldquo;Dear Ernest,
+ he longs for me; but he thinks it selfish to let me travel so far alone to
+ see him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Full of this idea, she yielded to her love. She made her preparations, and
+ wrote to him, that, if he did not forbid her peremptorily, he must expect
+ to see her at his breakfast-table in a very few days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Vane concluded this was a jest, and did not answer this letter at all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Vane started. She traveled with all speed; but, coming to a halt at
+ &mdash;&mdash;, she wrote to her husband that she counted on being with
+ him at four of the clock on Thursday.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This letter preceded her arrival by a few hours. It was put into his hand
+ at the same time with a note from Mrs. Woffington, telling him she should
+ be at a rehearsal at Covent Garden. Thinking his wife's letter would keep,
+ he threw it on one side into a sort of a tray; and, after a hurried
+ breakfast, went out of his house to the theater. He returned, as we are
+ aware, with Mrs. Woffington; and also, at her request, with Mr. Cibber,
+ for whom they had called on their way. He had forgotten his wife's letter,
+ and was entirely occupied with his guests.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles Pomander joined them, and found Mr. Colander, the head
+ domestic of the London establishment, cutting with a pair of scissors
+ every flower Mrs. Woffington fancied, that lady having a passion for
+ flowers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Colander, during his temporary absence from the interior, had appointed
+ James Burdock to keep the house, and receive the two remaining guests,
+ should they arrive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This James Burdock was a faithful old country servant, who had come up
+ with Mr. Vane, but left his heart at Willoughby. James Burdock had for
+ some time been ruminating, and his conclusion was, that his mistress, Miss
+ Mabel (as by force of habit he called her), was not treated as she
+ deserved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Burdock had been imported into Mr. Vane's family by Mabel; he had carried
+ her in his arms when she was a child; he had held her upon a donkey when
+ she was a little girl; and when she became a woman, it was he who taught
+ her to stand close to her horse, and give him her foot and spring while he
+ lifted her steadily but strongly into her saddle, and, when there, it was
+ he who had instructed her that a horse was not a machine, that galloping
+ tires it in time, and that galloping it on the hard road hammers it to
+ pieces. &ldquo;I taught the girl,&rdquo; thought James within himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This honest silver-haired old fellow seemed so ridiculous to Colander, the
+ smooth, supercilious Londoner, that he deigned sometimes to converse with
+ James, in order to quiz him. This very morning they had had a
+ conversation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poor Miss Mabel! dear heart. A twelvemonth married, and nigh six months
+ of it a widow, or next door.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We write to her, James, and entertain her replies, which are at
+ considerable length.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, but we don't read 'em!&rdquo; said James, with an uneasy glance at the
+ tray.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Invariably, at our leisure; meantime we make ourselves happy among the
+ wits and the sirens.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And she do make others happy among the poor and the ailing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Which shows,&rdquo; said Colander, superciliously, &ldquo;the difference of tastes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Burdock, whose eye had never been off his mistress's handwriting, at last
+ took it up and said: &ldquo;Master Colander, do if ye please, sir, take this
+ into master's dressing-room, do now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Colander looked down on the missive with dilating eye. &ldquo;Not a bill, James
+ Burdock,&rdquo; said he, reproachfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A bill! bless ye, no. A letter from missus.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No, the dog would not take it in to his master; and poor James, with a
+ sigh, replaced it in the tray.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This James Burdock, then, was left in charge of the hall by Colander, and
+ it so happened that the change was hardly effected before a hurried
+ knocking came to the street door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, ay!&rdquo; grumbled Burdock, &ldquo;I thought it would not be long. London for
+ knocking and ringing all day, and ringing and knocking all night.&rdquo; He
+ opened the door reluctantly and suspiciously, and in darted a lady, whose
+ features were concealed by a hood. She glided across the hall, as if she
+ was making for some point, and old James shuffled after her, crying:
+ &ldquo;Stop, stop! young woman. What is your name, young woman?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, James Burdock,&rdquo; cried the lady, removing her hood, &ldquo;have you
+ forgotten your mistress?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mistress! Why, Miss Mabel, I ask your pardon, madam&mdash;here, John,
+ Margery!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; cried Mrs. Vane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But where are your trunks, miss? And where's the coach, and Darby and
+ Joan? To think of their drawing you all the way here! I'll have 'em into
+ your room directly, ma'am. Miss, you've come just in time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What a dear, good, stupid old thing you are, James. Where is Ernest&mdash;Mr.
+ Vane? James, is he well and happy? I want to surprise him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, ma'am,&rdquo; said James, looking down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I left the old stupid coach at Islington, James. The something&mdash;pin
+ was loose, or I don't know what. Could I wait two hours there? So I came
+ on by myself; you wicked old man, you let me talk, and don't tell me how
+ he is.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Master is main well, ma'am, and thank you,&rdquo; said old Burdock, confused
+ and uneasy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But is he happy? Of course he is. Are we not to meet to-day after six
+ months? Ah! but never mind, they <i>are</i> gone by.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord bless her!&rdquo; thought the faithful old fellow. &ldquo;If sitting down and
+ crying could help her, I wouldn't be long.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time they were in the banqueting-room and at the preparations
+ there Mabel gave a start; she then colored. &ldquo;Oh, he has invited his
+ friends to make acquaintance. I had rather we had been alone all this day
+ and to-morrow. But he must not know that. No; <i>his</i> friends are <i>my</i>
+ friends, and shall be too,&rdquo; thought the country wife. She then glanced
+ with some misgiving at her traveling attire, and wished she had brought <i>one</i>
+ trunk with her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;James,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;where is my room? And, mind, I forbid you to tell a
+ soul I am come.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your room, Miss Mabel?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, any room where there is looking-glass and water.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She then went to a door which opened in fact on a short passage leading to
+ a room occupied by Mr. Vane himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no!&rdquo; cried James. &ldquo;That is master's room.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, is not master's room mistress's room, old man? But stay; is he
+ there?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, ma'am; he is in the garden, with a power of fine folks.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They shall not see me till I have made myself a little more decent,&rdquo; said
+ the young beauty, who knew at bottom how little comparatively the color of
+ her dress could affect her appearance, and she opened Mr. Vane's door and
+ glided in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Burdock's first determination was, in spite of her injunction, to tell
+ Colander; but on reflection he argued: &ldquo;And then what will they do? They
+ will put their heads together, and deceive us some other way. No!&rdquo; thought
+ James, with a touch of spite, &ldquo;we shall see how they will all look.&rdquo; He
+ argued also, that, at sight of his beautiful wife, his master must come to
+ his senses, and the Colander faction be defeated; and perhaps, by the
+ mercy of Providence, Colander himself turned off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While thus ruminating, a thundering knock at the door almost knocked him
+ off his legs. &ldquo;There ye go again,&rdquo; said he, and he went angrily to the
+ door. This time it was Hunsdon, who was in a desperate hurry to see his
+ master.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where is Sir Charles Pomander, my honest fellow?&rdquo; said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the garden, my Jack-a-dandy!&rdquo; said Burdock, furiously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (&ldquo;Honest fellow,&rdquo; among servants, implies some moral inferiority.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the garden went Hunsdon. His master&mdash;all whose senses were playing
+ sentinel&mdash;saw him, and left the company to meet him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She is in the house, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good! Go&mdash;vanish!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles looked into the banquet-room; the haunch was being placed on
+ the table. He returned with the information. He burned to bring husband
+ and wife together; he counted each second lost that postponed this (to
+ him) thrilling joy. Oh, how happy he was!&mdash;happier than the serpent
+ when he saw Eve's white teeth really strike into the apple!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Shall we pay respect to this haunch, Mr. Quin?&rdquo; said Vane, gayly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you please, sir,&rdquo; said Quin, gravely. Colander ran down a by-path with
+ an immense bouquet, which he arranged for Mrs. Woffington in a vase at Mr.
+ Vane's left hand. He then threw open the windows, which were on the French
+ plan, and shut within a foot of the lawn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The musicians in the arbor struck up, and the company, led by Mr. Vane and
+ Mrs. Woffington, entered the room. And a charming room it was!&mdash;light,
+ lofty, and large&mdash;adorned in the French way with white and gold. The
+ table was an exact oval, and at it everybody could hear what any one said;
+ an excellent arrangement where ideaed guests only are admitted&mdash;which
+ is another excellent arrangement, though I see people don't think so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The repast was luxurious and elegant. There was no profusion of unmeaning
+ dishes; each was a <i>bonne-bouche</i>&mdash;an undeniable delicacy. The
+ glass was beautiful, the plates silver. The flowers rose like walls from
+ the table; the plate massive and glorious; rose-water in the hand-glasses;
+ music crept in from the garden, deliciously subdued into what seemed a
+ natural sound. A broad stream of southern sun gushed in fiery gold through
+ the open window, and, like a red-hot rainbow, danced through the stained
+ glass above it. Existence was a thing to bask in&mdash;in such a place,
+ and so happy an hour!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The guests were Quin, Mrs. Clive, Mr. Cibber, Sir Charles Pomander, Mrs.
+ Woffington, and Messrs. Soaper and Snarl, critics of the day. This pair,
+ with wonderful sagacity, had arrived from the street as the haunch came
+ from the kitchen. Good-humor reigned; some cuts passed, but as the parties
+ professed wit, they gave and took.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quin carved the haunch, and was happy; Soaper and Snarl eating the same,
+ and drinking Toquay, were mellowed and mitigated into human flesh. Mr.
+ Vane and Mrs. Woffington were happy; he, because his conscience was
+ asleep; and she, because she felt nothing now could shake her hold of him.
+ Sir Charles was in a sort of mental chuckle. His head burned, his bones
+ ached; but he was in a sort of nervous delight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where is she?&rdquo; thought he. &ldquo;What will she do? Will she send her maid with
+ a note? How blue he will look! Or will she come herself? She is a country
+ wife; there must be a scene. Oh, why doesn't she come into this room? She
+ must know we are here! is she watching somewhere?&rdquo; His brain became
+ puzzled, and his senses were sharpened to a point; he was all eye, ear and
+ expectation; and this was why he was the only one to hear a very slight
+ sound behind the door we have mentioned, and next to perceive a lady's
+ glove lying close to that door. Mabel had dropped it in her retreat.
+ Putting this and that together, he was led to hope and believe she was
+ there, making her toilet, perhaps, and her arrival at present unknown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you expect no one else?&rdquo; said he, with feigned carelessness, to Mr.
+ Vane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Mr. Vane, with real carelessness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It must be so! What fortune!&rdquo; thought Pomander.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Soaper.</i> &ldquo;Mr. Cibber looks no older than he did five years ago.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Snarl.</i> &ldquo;There was no room on his face for a fresh wrinkle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Soaper.</i> &ldquo;He! he! Nay, Mr. Snarl: Mr. Cibber is like old port; the
+ more ancient he grows, the more delicious his perfume.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Snarl.</i> &ldquo;And the crustier he gets.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Clive.</i> &ldquo;Mr. Vane, you should always separate those two. Snarl, by
+ himself, is just supportable; but, when Soaper paves the way with his
+ hypocritical praise, the pair are too much; they are a two-edged sword.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Woffington.</i> &ldquo;Wanting nothing but polish and point.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Vane.</i> &ldquo;Gentlemen, we abandon your neighbor, Mr. Quin, to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Quin.</i> &ldquo;They know better. If they don't keep a civil tongue in their
+ heads, no fat goes from here to them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Cibber.</i> &ldquo;Ah, Mr. Vane; this room is delightful; but it makes me
+ sad. I knew this house in Lord Longueville's time; an unrivaled gallant,
+ Peggy. You may just remember him, Sir Charles?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Pomander</i> (with his eye on a certain door). &ldquo;Yes, yes; a gouty old
+ fellow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cibber fired up. &ldquo;I wish you may ever be like him. Oh, the beauty, the
+ wit, the <i>petits-soupers</i> that used to be here! Longueville was a
+ great creature, Mr. Vane. I have known him entertain a fine lady in this
+ room, while her rival was fretting and fuming on the other side of that
+ door.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, indeed!&rdquo; said Sir Charles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;More shame for him,&rdquo; said Mr. Vane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here was luck! Pomander seized this opportunity of turning the
+ conversation to his object. With a malicious twinkle in his eye, he
+ inquired of Mr. Cibber what made him fancy the house had lost its virtue
+ in Mr. Vane's hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because,&rdquo; said Cibber, peevishly, &ldquo;you all want the true <i>savoir faire</i>
+ nowadays, because there is no <i>juste milieu,</i> young gentlemen. The
+ young dogs of the day are all either unprincipled heathen, like yourself,
+ or Amadisses, like our worthy host.&rdquo; The old gentleman's face and manners
+ were like those of a patriarch, regretting the general decay of virtue,
+ not the imaginary diminution of a single vice. He concluded with a sigh
+ that, &ldquo;The true <i>preux des dames</i> went out with the full periwig;
+ stab my vitals!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A bit of fat, Mr. Cibber?&rdquo; said Quin, whose jokes were not polished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Jemmy, thou art a brute,&rdquo; was the reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You refuse, sir?&rdquo; said Quin, sternly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, sir!&rdquo; said Cibber, with dignity. &ldquo;I accept.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pomander's eye was ever on the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The old are so unjust to the young,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;You pretend that the
+ Deluge washed away iniquity, and that a rake is a fossil. What,&rdquo; said he,
+ leaning as it were on every word, &ldquo;if I bet you a cool hundred that Vane
+ has a petticoat in that room, and that Mrs. Woffington shall unearth her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The malicious dog thought this was the surest way to effect a dramatic
+ exposure, because if Peggy found Mabel to all appearances concealed, Peggy
+ would scold her, and betray herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pomander!&rdquo; cried Vane, in great heat; then, checking himself, he said
+ coolly: &ldquo;but you all know Pomander.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;None of you,&rdquo; replied that gentleman. &ldquo;Bring a chair, sir,&rdquo; said he,
+ authoritatively, to a servant; who, of course, obeyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Clive looked at him, and thought: &ldquo;There is something in this!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is for the lady,&rdquo; said he, coolly. Then, leaning over the table, he
+ said to Mrs. Woffington, with an impudent affectation of friendly
+ understanding: &ldquo;I ran her to earth in this house not ten minutes ago. Of
+ course I don't know who she is! But,&rdquo; smacking his lips, &ldquo;a rustic
+ Amaryllis, breathing all May-buds and Meadowsweet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have her out, Peggy!&rdquo; shouted Cibber. &ldquo;I know the run&mdash;there's the
+ covert! Hark, forward! Ha, ha, ha!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Vane rose, and, with a sternness that brought the old beau up with a
+ run, he said: &ldquo;Mr. Cibber, age and infirmity are privileged; but for you,
+ Sir Charles&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't be angry,&rdquo; interposed Mrs. Woffington, whose terror was lest he
+ should quarrel with so practiced a swordsman. &ldquo;Don't you see it is a jest!
+ and, as might be expected from poor Sir Charles, a very sorry one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A jest!&rdquo; said Vane, white with rage. &ldquo;Let it go no further, or it will be
+ earnest!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Woffington placed her hand on his shoulder, and at that touch he
+ instantly yielded, and sat down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was at this moment, when Sir Charles found himself for the present
+ baffled&mdash;for he could no longer press his point, and search that
+ room; when the attention of all was drawn to a dispute, which, for a
+ moment, had looked like a quarrel; while Mrs. Woffington's hand still
+ lingered, as only a woman's hand can linger in leaving the shoulder of the
+ man she loves; it was at this moment the door opened of its own accord,
+ and a most beautiful woman stood, with a light step, upon the threshold!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nobody's back was to her, except Mr. Vane's. Every eye but his was
+ spellbound upon her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Woffington withdrew her hand, as if a scorpion had touched her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A stupor of astonishment fell on them all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Vane, seeing the direction of all their eyes, slewed himself round in
+ his chair into a most awkward position, and when he saw the lady, he was
+ utterly dumfounded! But she, as soon as he turned his face her way, glided
+ up to him, with a little half-sigh, half-cry of joy, and taking him round
+ the neck, kissed him deliciously, while every eye at the table met every
+ other eye in turn. One or two of the men rose; for the lady's beauty was
+ as worthy of homage as her appearing was marvelous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Woffington, too astonished for emotion to take any definite shape,
+ said, in what seemed an ordinary tone: &ldquo;Who is this lady?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am his wife, madam,&rdquo; said Mabel, in the voice of a skylark, and smiling
+ friendly on the questioner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is my wife!&rdquo; said Vane, like a speaking-machine; he was scarcely in a
+ conscious state. &ldquo;It is my wife!&rdquo; he repeated, mechanically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The words were no sooner out of Mabel's mouth than two servants, who had
+ never heard of Mrs. Vane before, hastened to place on Mr. Vane's right
+ hand the chair Pomander had provided, a plate and napkin were there in a
+ twinkling, and the wife modestly, but as a matter of course, courtesied
+ low, with an air of welcome to all her guests, and then glided into the
+ seat her servants obsequiously placed before her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whole thing did not take half a minute!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ MR. VANE, besides being a rich, was a magnificent man; when his features
+ were in repose their beauty had a wise and stately character. Soaper and
+ Snarl had admired and bitterly envied him. At the present moment no one of
+ his guests envied him&mdash;they began to realize his position. And he, a
+ huge wheel of shame and remorse, began to turn and whir before his eyes.
+ He sat between two European beauties, and, pale and red by turns, shunned
+ the eyes of both, and looked down at his plate in a cold sweat of
+ humiliation, mortification and shame.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The iron passed through Mrs. Woffington's soul. So! this was a villain,
+ too, the greatest villain of all&mdash;a hypocrite! She turned very faint,
+ but she was under an enemy's eye, and under a rival's; the thought drove
+ the blood back from her heart, and with a mighty effort she was Woffington
+ again. Hitherto her liaison with Mr. Vane had called up the better part of
+ her nature, and perhaps our reader has been taking her for a good woman;
+ but now all her dregs were stirred to the surface. The mortified actress
+ gulled by a novice, the wronged and insulted woman, had but two thoughts;
+ to defeat her rival&mdash;to be revenged on her false lover. More than one
+ sharp spasm passed over her features before she could master them, and
+ then she became smiles above, wormwood and red-hot steel below&mdash;all
+ in less than half a minute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for the others, looks of keen intelligence passed between them, and
+ they watched with burning interest for the <i>denouement.</i> That
+ interest was stronger than their sense of the comicality of all this (for
+ the humorous view of what passes before our eyes comes upon cool
+ reflection, not often at the time).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles, indeed, who had foreseen some of this, wore a demure look,
+ belied by his glittering eye. He offered Cibber snuff, and the two
+ satirical animals grinned over the snuff-box, like a malicious old ape and
+ a mischievous young monkey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The newcomer was charming; she was above the middle height, of a full,
+ though graceful figure, her abundant, glossy, bright brown hair glittered
+ here and there like gold in the light; she had a snowy brow, eyes of the
+ profoundest blue, a cheek like a peach, and a face beaming candor and
+ goodness; the character of her countenance resembled &ldquo;the Queen of the
+ May,&rdquo; in Mr. Leslie's famous picture, more than any face of our day I can
+ call to mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are not angry with me for this silly trick?&rdquo; said she, with some
+ misgiving. &ldquo;After all I am only two hours before my time; you know,
+ dearest, I said four in my letter&mdash;did I not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vane stammered. What could he say?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you have had three days to prepare you, for I wrote, like a good
+ wife, to ask leave before starting; but he never so much as answered my
+ letter, madam.&rdquo; (This she addressed to Mrs. Woffington, who smiled by main
+ force.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why,&rdquo; stammered Vane, &ldquo;could you doubt? I&mdash;I&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No! Silence was consent, was it not? But I beg your pardon, ladies and
+ gentlemen, I hope you will forgive me. It is six months since I saw him&mdash;so
+ you understand&mdash;I warrant me you did not look for me so soon,
+ ladies?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Some of us did not look for you at all, madam,&rdquo; said Mrs. Woffington.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What, Ernest did not tell you he expected me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No! He told us this banquet was in honor of a lady's first visit to his
+ house, but none of us imagined that lady to be his wife.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vane began to writhe under that terrible tongue, whose point hitherto had
+ ever been turned away from him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He intended to steal a march on us,&rdquo; said Pomander, dryly; &ldquo;and, with
+ your help, we steal one on him;&rdquo; and he smiled maliciously on Mrs.
+ Woffington.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, madam,&rdquo; said Mr. Quin, &ldquo;the moment you did arrive, I kept sacred for
+ you a bit of the fat; for which, I am sure, you must be ready. Pass her
+ plate!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not at present, Mr. Quin,&rdquo; said Mr. Vane, hastily. &ldquo;She is about to
+ retire and change her traveling-dress.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, dear; but, you forget, I am a stranger to your friends. Will you not
+ introduce me to them first?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no!&rdquo; cried Vane, in trepidation. &ldquo;It is not usual to introduce in the
+ <i>beau monde.&rdquo;</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We always introduce ourselves,&rdquo; rejoined Mrs. Woffington. She rose
+ slowly, with her eye on Vane. He cast a look of abject entreaty on her;
+ but there was no pity in that curling lip and awful eye. He closed his own
+ eyes and waited for the blow. Sir Charles threw himself back in his chair,
+ and, chuckling, prepared for the explosion. Mrs. Woffington saw him, and
+ cast on him a look of ineffable scorn; and then she held the whole company
+ fluttering a long while. At length: &ldquo;The Honorable Mrs. Quickly, madam,&rdquo;
+ said she, indicating Mrs. Clive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This turn took them all by surprise. Pomander bit his lip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir John Brute&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Falstaff,&rdquo; cried Quin; &ldquo;hang it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir John Brute Falstaff,&rdquo; resumed Mrs. Woffington. &ldquo;We call him, for
+ brevity, Brute.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vane drew a long breath. &ldquo;Your neighbor is Lord Foppington; a butterfly of
+ some standing, and a little gouty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Charles Pomander.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; cried Mrs. Vane. &ldquo;It is the good gentleman who helped us out of the
+ slough, near Huntingdon. Ernest, if it had not been for this gentleman, I
+ should not have had the pleasure of being here now.&rdquo; And she beamed on the
+ good Pomander.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Vane did not rise and embrace Sir Charles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All the company thanks the good Sir Charles,&rdquo; said Cibber, bowing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see it in all their faces,&rdquo; said the good Sir Charles, dryly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Woffington continued: &ldquo;Mr. Soaper, Mr. Snarl; gentlemen who would
+ butter and slice up their own fathers!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bless me!&rdquo; cried Mrs. Vane, faintly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Critics!&rdquo; And she dropped, as it were, the word dryly, with a sweet
+ smile, into Mabel's plate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Vane was relieved; she had apprehended cannibals. London they had
+ told her was full of curiosities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But yourself, madam?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am the Lady Betty Modish; at your service.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A four-inch grin went round the table. The dramatical old rascal, Cibber,
+ began now to look at it as a bit of genteel comedy; and slipped out his
+ note-book under the table. Pomander cursed her ready wit, which had
+ disappointed him of his catastrophe. Vane wrote on a slip of paper: &ldquo;Pity
+ and respect the innocent!&rdquo; and passed it to Mrs. Woffington. He could not
+ have done a more superfluous or injudicious thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And now, Ernest,&rdquo; cried Mabel, &ldquo;for the news from Willoughby.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vane stopped her in dismay. He felt how many satirical eyes and ears were
+ upon him and his wife. &ldquo;Pray go and change your dress first, Mabel,&rdquo; cried
+ he, fully determined that on her return she should not find the present
+ party there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Vane cast an imploring look on Mrs. Woffington. &ldquo;My things are not
+ come,&rdquo; said she. &ldquo;And, Lady Betty, I had so much to tell him, and to be
+ sent away;&rdquo; and the deep blue eyes began to fill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Mrs. Woffington was determined that this lady, who she saw was simple,
+ should disgust her husband by talking twaddle before a band of satirists.
+ So she said warmly: &ldquo;It is not fair on us. Pray, madam, your budget of
+ country news. Clouted cream so seldom comes to London quite fresh.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There, you see, Ernest,&rdquo; said the unsuspicious soul. &ldquo;First, you must
+ know that Gray Gillian is turned out for a brood mare, so old George won't
+ let me ride her; old servants are such tyrants, my lady. And my Barbary
+ hen has laid two eggs; Heaven knows the trouble we had to bring her to it.
+ And Dame Best, that is my husband's old nurse, Mrs. Quickly, has had soup
+ and pudding from the Hall everyday; and once she went so far as to say it
+ wasn't altogether a bad pudding. She is not a very grateful woman, in a
+ general way, poor thing! I made it with these hands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vane writhed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Happy pudding!&rdquo; observed Mr. Cibber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is this mockery, sir?&rdquo; cried Vane, with a sudden burst of irritation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, sir; it is gallantry,&rdquo; replied Cibber, with perfect coolness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Will you hear a little music in the garden?&rdquo; said Vane to Mrs.
+ Woffington, pooh-poohing his wife's news.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not till I hear the end of Dame Bess.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Best, my lady.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dame Best interests <i>me,</i> Mr. Vane.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, and Ernest is very fond of her, too, when he is at home. She is in
+ her nice new cottage, dear; but she misses the draughts that were in her
+ old one&mdash;they were like old friends. 'The only ones I have, I'm
+ thinking,' said the dear cross old thing; and there stood I, on her floor,
+ with a flannel petticoat in both hands, that I had made for her, and
+ ruined my finger. Look else, my Lord Foppington?&rdquo; She extended a hand the
+ color of cream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Permit me, madam?&rdquo; taking out his glasses, with which he inspected her
+ finger; and gravely announced to the company: &ldquo;The laceration is, in fact,
+ discernible. May I be permitted, madam,&rdquo; added he, &ldquo;to kiss this fair
+ hand, which I should never have suspected of having ever made itself half
+ so useful?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, my lord!&rdquo; said she, coloring slightly, &ldquo;you shall, because you are so
+ old; but I don't say for a young gentleman, unless it was the one that
+ belongs to me; and he does not ask me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear Mabel; pray remember we are not at Willoughby.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see we are not, Ernest.&rdquo; And the dove-like eyes filled brimful; and all
+ her innocent prattle was put an end to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What brutes men are,&rdquo; thought Mrs. Woffington. &ldquo;They are not worthy even
+ of a fool like this.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Vane once more pressed her to hear a little music in the garden; and
+ this time she consented. Mr. Vane was far from being unmoved by his wife's
+ arrival, and her true affection. But she worried him; he was anxious,
+ above all things, to escape from his present position, and separate the
+ rival queens; and this was the only way he could see to do it. He
+ whispered Mabel, and bade her somewhat peremptorily rest herself for an
+ hour after her journey, and he entered the garden with Mrs. Woffington.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the other gentlemen admired Mrs. Vane the most. She was new. She was
+ as lovely, in her way, as Peggy; and it was the young May-morn beauty of
+ the country. They forgave her simplicity, and even her goodness, on
+ account of her beauty; men are not severe judges of beautiful women. They
+ all solicited her to come with them, and be the queen of the garden. But
+ the good wife was obedient. Her lord had told her she was fatigued; so she
+ said she was tired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Vane's garden will lack its sweetest and fairest flower, madam,&rdquo;
+ cried Cibber, &ldquo;if we leave you here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, my lord, there are fairer than I.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poor Quin!&rdquo; cried Kitty Clive; &ldquo;to have to leave the alderman's walk for
+ the garden-walk.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All I regret,&rdquo; said the honest glutton, stoutly, &ldquo;is that I go without
+ carving for Mrs. Vane.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are very good, Sir John; I will be more troublesome to you at
+ supper-time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they were all gone, she couldn't help sighing. It almost seemed as if
+ everybody was kinder to her than he whose kindness alone she valued. &ldquo;And
+ he must take Lady Betty's hand instead of mine,&rdquo; thought she. &ldquo;But that is
+ good breeding, I suppose. I wish there was no such thing; we are very
+ happy without it in Shropshire.&rdquo; Then this poor little soul was ashamed of
+ herself, and took herself to task. &ldquo;Poor Ernest,&rdquo; said she, pitying the
+ wrongdoer, like a woman, &ldquo;he was not pleased to be so taken by surprise.
+ No wonder; they are so ceremonious in London. How good of him not to be
+ angry!&rdquo; Then she sighed; her heart had received a damp. His voice seemed
+ changed, and he did not meet her eyes with the look he wore at Willoughby.
+ She looked timidly into the garden. She saw the gay colors of beaux, as
+ well as of belles&mdash;for in these days broadcloth had not displaced
+ silk and velvet&mdash;glancing and shining among the trees; and she
+ sighed, but, presently brightening up a little, she said: &ldquo;I will go and
+ see that the coffee is hot and clear, and the chocolate well mixed for
+ them.&rdquo; The poor child wanted to do something to please her husband. Before
+ she could carry out this act of domestic virtue, her attention was drawn
+ to a strife of tongues in the hall. She opened the folding-doors, and
+ there was a fine gentleman obstructing the entrance of a somber, rusty
+ figure, with a portfolio and a manuscript under each arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fine gentleman was Colander. The seedy personage was the eternal
+ Triplet, come to make hay with his five-foot rule while the sun shone.
+ Colander had opened the door to him, and he had shot into the hall. The
+ major-domo obstructed the farther entrance of such a coat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I tell you my master is not at home,&rdquo; remonstrated the major-domo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How can you say so,&rdquo; cried Mrs. Vane, in surprise, &ldquo;when you know he is
+ in the garden?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Simpleton!&rdquo; thought Colander.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Show the gentleman in.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gentleman!&rdquo; muttered Colander.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet thanked her for her condescension; he would wait for Mr. Vane in
+ the hall. &ldquo;I came by appointment, madam; this is the only excuse for the
+ importunity you have just witnessed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hearing this, Mrs. Vane dismissed Colander to inform his master. Colander
+ bowed loftily, and walked into the servants' hall without deigning to take
+ the last proposition into consideration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come in here, sir,&rdquo; said Mabel; &ldquo;Mr. Vane will come as soon as he can
+ leave his company.&rdquo; Triplet entered in a series of obsequious jerks. &ldquo;Sit
+ down and rest you, sir.&rdquo; And Mrs. Vane seated herself at the table, and
+ motioned with her white hand to Triplet to sit beside her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet bowed, and sat on the edge of a chair, and smirked and dropped his
+ portfolio, and instantly begged Mrs. Vane's pardon; in taking it up, he
+ let fall his manuscript, and was again confused; but in the middle of some
+ superfluous and absurd excuse his eye fell on the haunch; it straightway
+ dilated to an enormous size, and he became suddenly silent and absorbed in
+ contemplation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You look sadly tired, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, yes, madam. It is a long way from Lambeth Walk, and it is passing
+ hot, madam.&rdquo; He took his handkerchief out, and was about to wipe his brow,
+ but returned it hastily to his pocket. &ldquo;I beg your pardon, madam,&rdquo; said
+ Triplet, whose ideas of breeding, though speculative, were severe, &ldquo;I
+ forgot myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mabel looked at him, and colored, and slightly hesitated. At last she
+ said: &ldquo;I'll be bound you came in such a hurry you forgot&mdash;you mustn't
+ be angry with me&mdash;to have your dinner first!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For Triplet looked like an absurd wolf&mdash;all benevolence and
+ starvation!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What divine intelligence!&rdquo; thought Trip. &ldquo;How strange, madam,&rdquo; cried he,
+ &ldquo;you have hit it! This accounts, at once, for a craving I feel. Now you
+ remind me, I recollect carving for others, I did forget to remember
+ myself. Not that I need have forgot it to-day, madam; but, being used to
+ forget it, I did not remember not to forget it to-day, madam, that was
+ all.&rdquo; And the author of this intelligent account smiled very, very, very
+ absurdly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She poured him out a glass of wine. He rose and bowed; but peremptorily
+ refused it, with his tongue&mdash;his eye drank it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you must,&rdquo; persisted this hospitable lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, madam, consider I am not entitled to&mdash;Nectar, as I am a man!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The white hand was filling his plate with partridge pie: &ldquo;But, madam, you
+ don't consider how you overwhelm me with your&mdash;Ambrosia, as I am a
+ poet!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sorry Mr. Vane should keep you waiting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By no means, madam; it is fortunate&mdash;I mean, it procures me the
+ pleasure of&rdquo; (here articulation became obstructed) &ldquo;your society, madam.
+ Besides, the servants of the Muse are used to waiting. What we are not
+ used to is&rdquo; (here the white hand filled his glass) &ldquo;being waited upon by
+ Hebe and the Twelve Graces, whose health I have the honor &ldquo;&mdash;(Deglutition).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A poet!&rdquo; cried Mabel; &ldquo;oh! I am so glad! Little did I think ever to see a
+ living poet! Dear heart! I should not have known, if you had not told me.
+ Sir, I love poetry!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is in your face, madam.&rdquo; Triplet instantly whipped out his manuscript,
+ put a plate on one corner of it, and a decanter on the other, and begged
+ her opinion of this trifle, composed, said he, &ldquo;in honor of a lady Mr.
+ Vane entertains to-day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; said Mrs. Vane, and colored with pleasure. How ungrateful she had
+ been! Here was an attention!&mdash;For, of course, she never doubted that
+ the verses were in honor of her arrival.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Bright being&mdash;'&rdquo; sang out Triplet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, sir,&rdquo; said Mabel; &ldquo;I think I know the lady, and it would be hardly
+ proper of me&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, madam!&rdquo; said Triplet, solemnly; &ldquo;strictly correct, madam!&rdquo; And he
+ spread his hand out over his bosom. &ldquo;Strictly!&mdash;'Blunderbuss' (my
+ poetical name, madam) never stooped to the taste of the town.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 'Bright being, thou&mdash;'&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you must have another glass of wine first, and a slice of the
+ haunch.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With alacrity, madam.&rdquo; He laid in a fresh stock of provisions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Strange it was to see them side by side! <i>he,</i> a Don Quixote, with
+ cordage instead of lines in his mahogany face, and clothes hanging upon
+ him; <i>she,</i> smooth, duck-like, delicious, and bright as an opening
+ rose fresh with dew!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She watched him kindly, archly and demurely; and still plied him,
+ countrywise, with every mortal thing on the table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the poet was not a boa-constrictor, and even a boa-constrictor has an
+ end. Hunger satisfied, his next strongest feeling, simple vanity, remained
+ to be contented. As the last morsel went in out came:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Bright being, thou whose ra&mdash;'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No! no!&rdquo; said she, who fancied herself (and not without reason) the
+ bright being. &ldquo;Mr. Vane intended them for a surprise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As you please, madam;&rdquo; and the disappointed bore sighed. &ldquo;But you would
+ have liked them, for the theme inspired me. The kindest, the most generous
+ of women! Don't you agree with me, madam?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mabel Vane opened her eyes. &ldquo;Hardly, sir,&rdquo; laughed she.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you knew her as I do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I ought to know her better, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, indeed! Well, madam, now her kindness to me, for instance&mdash;a
+ poor devil like me. The expression, I trust, is not disagreeable to you,
+ madam? If so, forgive me, and consider it withdrawn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;La, sir! civility is so cheap, if you go to that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Civility, ma'am? Why, she has saved me from despair&mdash;from
+ starvation, perhaps.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poor thing! Well, indeed, sir, you looked&mdash;you looked&mdash;what a
+ shame! and you a poet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;From an epitaph to an epic, madam.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this moment a figure looked in upon them from the garden, but retreated
+ unobserved. It was Sir Charles Pomander, who had slipped away, with the
+ heartless and malicious intention of exposing the husband to the wife, and
+ profiting by her indignation and despair. Seeing Triplet, he made an
+ extemporaneous calculation that so infernal a chatterbox could not be ten
+ minutes in her company without telling her everything, and this would
+ serve his turn very well. He therefore postponed his purpose, and strolled
+ away to a short distance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet justified the baronet's opinion. Without any sort of sequency he
+ now informed Mrs. Vane that the benevolent lady was to sit to him for her
+ portrait.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here was a new attention of Ernest's. How good he was, and how wicked and
+ ungrateful she!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! are you a painter too?&rdquo; she inquired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;From a house front to an historical composition, madam.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, what a clever man! And so Ernest commissioned you to paint a
+ portrait?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, madam; for that I am indebted to the lady herself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The lady herself?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, madam; and I expected to find her here. Will you add to your
+ kindness by informing me whether she has arrived? Or she is gone&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who, sir? (Oh, dear! not my portrait! Oh, Ernest!)&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who, madam!&rdquo; cried Triplet; &ldquo;why, Mrs. Woffington!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She is not here,&rdquo; said Mrs. Vane, who remembered all the names perfectly
+ well. &ldquo;There is one charming lady among our guests, her face took me in a
+ moment; but she is a titled lady. There is no Mrs. Woffington among them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Strange!&rdquo; replied Triplet; &ldquo;she was to be here; and, in fact, that is why
+ I expedited these lines in her honor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In <i>her</i> honor, sir?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, madam. Allow me:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 'Brights being, thou whose radiant brow&mdash;'&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No! no! I don't care to hear them now, for I don't know the lady.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, madam, but at least you have seen her act?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Act! you don't mean all this is for an actress?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>&ldquo;An</i> actress? <i>The</i> actress! And you have never seen her act?
+ What a pleasure you have to come! To see her act is a privilege; but to
+ act with her, as <i>I</i> once did! But she does not remember that, nor
+ shall I remind her, madam,&rdquo; said Triplet sternly. &ldquo;On that occasion I was
+ hissed, owing to circumstances which, for the credit of our common nature,
+ I suppress.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! are you an actor too? You are everything.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And it was in a farce of my own, madam, which, by the strangest
+ combination of accidents, was damned!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A play-writer? Oh, what clever men there are in the world&mdash;in
+ London, at least! He is a play-writer, too. I wonder my husband comes not.
+ Does Mr. Vane&mdash;does Mr. Vane admire this actress?&rdquo; said she,
+ suddenly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Vane, madam, is a gentleman of taste,&rdquo; said he, pompously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, sir,&rdquo; said the lady, languidly, &ldquo;she is not here.&rdquo; Triplet took the
+ hint and rose. &ldquo;Good-by,&rdquo; said she, sweetly; and thank you kindly for your
+ company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Triplet, madam&mdash;James Triplet, of 10, Hercules Buildings, Lambeth.
+ Occasional verses, odes, epithalamia, elegies, dedications, squibs,
+ impromptus and hymns executed with spirit, punctuality and secrecy.
+ Portraits painted, and instruction in declamation, sacred, profane and
+ dramatic. The card, madam&rdquo; (and he drew it as doth a theatrical fop his
+ rapier) &ldquo;of him who, to all these qualifications adds a prouder still&mdash;that
+ of being,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Madam,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your humble, devoted and grateful servant,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;JAMES TRIPLET.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He bowed in a line from his right shoulder to his left toe, and moved off.
+ But Triplet could not go all at one time out of such company; he was given
+ to return in real life, he had played this trick so often on the stage. He
+ came back, exuberant with gratitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The fact is, madam,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;strange as it may appear to you, a kind
+ hand has not so often been held out to me, that I should forget it,
+ especially when that hand is so fair and gracious. May I be permitted,
+ madam&mdash;you will impute it to gratitude rather than audacity&mdash;I&mdash;I&mdash;&rdquo;
+ (whimper), &ldquo;madam&rdquo; (with sudden severity), &ldquo;I am gone!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These last words he pronounced with the right arm at an angle of
+ forty-five degrees, and the fingers pointing horizontally. The stage had
+ taught him this grace also. In his day, an actor who had three words to
+ say, such as, &ldquo;My lord's carriage is waiting,&rdquo; came on the stage with the
+ right arm thus elevated, delivered his message in the tones of a falling
+ dynasty, wheeled like a soldier, and retired with the left arm pointing to
+ the sky and the right hand extended behind him like a setter's tail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Left to herself, Mabel was uneasy. &ldquo;Ernest is so warm-hearted.&rdquo; This was
+ the way she put it even to herself. He admired her acting and wished to
+ pay her a compliment. &ldquo;What if I carried him the verses?&rdquo; She thought she
+ should surely please him by showing she was not the least jealous or
+ doubtful of him. The poor child wanted so to win a kind look from her
+ husband; but ere she could reach the window Sir Charles Pomander had
+ entered it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Sir Charles was naturally welcome to Mrs. Vane; for all she knew of
+ him was, that he had helped her on the road to her husband.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Pomander.</i> &ldquo;What, madam! all alone here as in Shropshire?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Mabel.</i> &ldquo;For the moment, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Pomander.</i> &ldquo;Force of habit. A husband with a wife in Shropshire is
+ so like a bachelor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Mabel.</i> &ldquo;Sir!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Pomander.</i> &ldquo;And our excellent Ernest is such a favorite!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Mabel.</i> &ldquo;No wonder, sir!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Pomander.</i> &ldquo;Few can so pass from the larva state of country squire
+ to the butterfly nature of beau.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Mabel.</i> &ldquo;Yes&rdquo; (sadly), &ldquo;I find him changed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Pomander.</i> &ldquo;Changed! Transformed. He is now the prop of the
+ 'Cocoa-Tree,' the star of Ranelagh, the Lauzun of the green-room.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Mabel.</i> &ldquo;The green-room! Where is that? You mean kindly, sir; but
+ you make me unhappy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Pomander.</i> &ldquo;The green-room, my dear madam, is the bower where houris
+ put off their wings, and goddesses become dowdies; where Lady Macbeth
+ weeps over her lap-dog, dead from repletion; and Belvidera soothes her
+ broken heart with a dozen of oysters. In a word, it is the place where
+ actors and actresses become men and women, and act their own parts with
+ skill, instead of a poet's clumsily.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Mabel.</i> &ldquo;Actors! actresses! Does Mr. Vane frequent such&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Pomander.</i> &ldquo;He has earned in six months a reputation many a fine
+ gentleman would give his ears for. Not a scandalous journal his initials
+ have not figured in; not an actress of reputation gossip has not given him
+ for a conquest.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How dare you say this to me?&rdquo; cried Mrs. Vane, with a sudden flash of
+ indignation, and then the tears streamed over her lovely cheeks; and even
+ a Pomander might have forborne to torture her so; but Sir Charles had no
+ mercy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You would be sure to learn it,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;and with malicious additions.
+ It is better to hear the truth from a friend.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A friend? He is no friend to a house who calumniates the husband to the
+ wife. Is it the part of a friend to distort dear Ernest's kindliness and
+ gayety into ill morals; to pervert his love of poetry and plays into an
+ unworthy attachment to actors and&mdash;oh!&rdquo; and the tears would come. But
+ she dried them, for now she hated this man; with all the little power of
+ hatred she had, she detested him. &ldquo;Do you suppose I did not know Mrs.
+ Woffington was to come to us to-day?&rdquo; cried she, struggling passionately
+ against her own fears and Sir Charles's innuendoes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What!&rdquo; cried he; &ldquo;you recognized her? You detected the actress of all
+ work under the airs of Lady Betty Modish?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lady Betty Modish!&rdquo; cried Mabel. &ldquo;That good, beautiful face!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; cried Sir Charles, &ldquo;I see you did not. Well, Lady Betty was Mrs.
+ Woffington!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whom my husband, I know, had invited here to present her with these
+ verses, which I shall take him for her;&rdquo; and her poor little lip trembled.
+ &ldquo;Had the visit been in any other character, as you are so base, so cruel
+ as to insinuate (what have I done to you that you kill me so, you wicked
+ gentleman?), would he have chosen the day of my arrival?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not if he knew you were coming,&rdquo; was the cool reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And he did know&mdash;I wrote to him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed!&rdquo; said Pomander, fairly puzzled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Vane caught sight of her handwriting on the tray, and darted to it,
+ and seized her letter, and said, triumphantly:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My last letter, written upon the road&mdash;see!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles took it with surprise, but, turning it in his hand, a cool,
+ satirical smile came to his face. He handed it back, and said, coldly:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Read me the passage, madam, on which you argue.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poor Mrs. Vane turned the letter in her hand, and her eye became instantly
+ glazed; the seal was unbroken! She gave a sharp cry of agony, like a
+ wounded deer. She saw Pomander no longer; she was alone with her great
+ anguish. &ldquo;I had but my husband and my God in the world,&rdquo; cried she. &ldquo;My
+ mother is gone. My God, have pity on me! my husband does not love me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cold villain was startled at the mighty storm his mean hand had
+ raised. This creature had not only more feeling, but more passion, than a
+ hundred libertines. He muttered some villain's commonplaces; while this
+ unhappy young lady raised her hands to heaven, and sobbed in a way very
+ terrible to any manly heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is unworthy you,&rdquo; muttered Pomander. &ldquo;He has forfeited your love. He
+ has left you nothing but revenge. Be comforted. Let me, who have learned
+ already to adore you&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So,&rdquo; cried she, turning on him in a moment (for, on some points, woman's
+ instinct is the lightning of wisdom), &ldquo;this, sir, was your object? I may
+ no longer hold a place in my husband's heart; but I am mistress of his
+ house. Leave it, sir! and never return to it while I live.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles, again discomfited, bowed reverentially. &ldquo;Your wish shall ever
+ be respected by me, madam! But here they come. Use the right of a wife.
+ Conceal yourself in that high chair. See, I turn it; so that they cannot
+ see you. At least you will find I have but told you the truth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No!&rdquo; cried Mabel, violently. &ldquo;I will not spy upon my husband at the
+ dictation of his treacherous friend.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles vanished. He was no sooner gone than Mrs. Vane crouched,
+ trembling, and writhing with jealousy, in the large, high-backed chair.
+ She heard her husband and the <i>soi-disant</i> Lady Betty Modish enter.
+ During their absence, Mrs. Woffington had doubtless been playing her cards
+ with art; for it appeared that a reconciliation was now taking place. The
+ lady, however, was still cool and distant. It was poor Mabel's fate to
+ hear these words: &ldquo;You must permit me to go alone, Mr. Vane. I insist upon
+ leaving this house alone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On this, he whispered to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She answered: &ldquo;You are not justified.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can explain all,&rdquo; was his reply. &ldquo;I am ready to renounce credit,
+ character, all the world for you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They passed out of the room before the unhappy listener could recover the
+ numbing influence of these deadly words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the next moment she started wildly up, and cried as one drowning cries
+ vaguely for help: &ldquo;Ernest! oh, no&mdash;no! you cannot use me so! Ernest&mdash;husband!
+ Oh, mother! mother!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She rose, and would have made for the door, but nature had been too
+ cruelly tried. At the first step she could no longer see anything; and the
+ next moment, swooning dead away, she fell back insensible, with her head
+ and shoulders resting on the chair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ MR. VANE was putting Mrs. Woffington into her chair, when he thought he
+ heard his name cried. He bade that lady a mournful farewell, and stepped
+ back into his own hall. He had no sooner done so than he heard a voice,
+ the accent of which alarmed him, though he distinguished no word. He
+ hastily crossed the hall and flew into the banquet-room. Coming rapidly in
+ at the folding-doors he almost fell over his wife, lying insensible half
+ upon the floor and half upon the chair. When he saw her pale and
+ motionless, a terrible misgiving seized him; he fell on his knees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mabel, Mabel!&rdquo; cried he, &ldquo;my love! my innocent wife! Oh, God! what have I
+ done? Perhaps it is the fatigue&mdash;perhaps she has fainted.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, it is not the fatigue!&rdquo; screamed a voice near him. It was old James
+ Burdock, who, with his white hair streaming and his eye gleaming with
+ fire, shook his fist in his master's face&mdash;&ldquo;no, it is not the
+ fatigue, you villain! It is you who have killed her, with your jezebels
+ and harlots, you scoundrel!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Send the women here, James, for God's sake!&rdquo; cried Mr. Vane, not even
+ noticing the insult he had received from a servant. He stamped furiously,
+ and cried for help. The whole household was round her in a moment. They
+ carried her to bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The remorse-stricken man, his own knees trembling under him, flew, in an
+ agony of fear and self-reproach, for a doctor!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>A doctor?</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ DURING the garden scene, Mr. Vane had begged Mrs. Woffington to let him
+ accompany her. She peremptorily refused, and said in the same breath she
+ was going to Triplet, in Hercules Buildings, to have her portrait
+ finished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had Mr. Vane understood the sex, he would not have interpreted her refusal
+ to the letter; when there was a postscript, the meaning of which was so
+ little enigmatical.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some three hours after the scene we have described, Mrs. Woffington sat in
+ Triplet's apartment; and Triplet, palette in hand, painted away upon her
+ portrait.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Woffington was in that languid state which comes to women after their
+ hearts have received a blow. She felt as if life was ended, and but the
+ dregs of existence remained; but at times a flood of bitterness rolled
+ over her, and she resigned all hope of perfect happiness in this world&mdash;all
+ hope of loving and respecting the same creature; and at these moments she
+ had but one idea&mdash;to use her own power, and bind her lover to her by
+ chains never to be broken; and to close her eyes, and glide down the
+ precipice of the future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think you are master of this art,&rdquo; said she, very languidly, to
+ Triplet, &ldquo;you paint so rapidly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, madam,&rdquo; said Triplet, gloomily; and painted on. &ldquo;Confound this
+ shadow!&rdquo; added he; and painted on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His soul, too, was clouded. Mrs. Woffington, yawning in his face, had told
+ him she had invited all Mr. Vane's company to come and praise his work;
+ and ever since that he had been <i>morne et silencieux.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are fortunate,&rdquo; continued Mrs. Woffington, not caring what she said;
+ &ldquo;it is so difficult to make execution keep pace with conception.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, ma'am;&rdquo; and he painted on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are satisfied with it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Anything but, ma'am;&rdquo; and he painted on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cheerful soul!&mdash;then I presume it is like?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not a bit, ma'am;&rdquo; and he painted on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Woffington stretched.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You can't yawn, ma'am&mdash;you can't yawn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, yes, I can. You are such good company;&rdquo; and she stretched again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was just about to catch the turn of the lip,&rdquo; remonstrated Triplet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, catch it&mdash;it won't run away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll try, ma'am. A pleasant half-hour it will be for me, when they all
+ come here like cits at a shilling ordinary&mdash;each for his cut.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At a sensitive goose!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is as may be, madam. Those critics flay us alive!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You should not hold so many doors open to censure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, ma'am. Head a little more that way. I suppose you <i>can't</i> sit
+ quiet, ma'am?&mdash;then never mind!&rdquo; (This resignation was intended as a
+ stinging reproach.) &ldquo;Mr. Cibber, with his sneering snuff-box! Mr. Quin,
+ with his humorous bludgeon! Mrs. Clive, with her tongue! Mr. Snarl, with
+ his abuse! And Mr. Soaper, with his praise!&mdash;arsenic in treacle I
+ call it! But there, I deserve it all! For look on this picture, and on
+ this!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Meaning, I am painted as well as my picture!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, no, no, no! But to turn from your face, madam&mdash;on which the
+ lightning of expression plays, continually&mdash;to this stony,
+ detestable, dead daub!&mdash;I could&mdash;And I will, too! Imposture!
+ dead caricature of life and beauty, take that!&rdquo; and he dashed his
+ palette-knife through the canvas. &ldquo;Libelous lie against nature and Mrs.
+ Woffington, take that!&rdquo; and he stabbed the canvas again; then, with sudden
+ humility: &ldquo;I beg your pardon, ma'am,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;for this apparent outrage,
+ which I trust you will set down to the excitement attendant upon failure.
+ The fact is, I am an incapable ass, and no painter! Others have often
+ hinted as much; but I never observed it myself till now!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Right through my pet dimple!&rdquo; said Mrs. Woffington, with perfect <i>nonchalance.</i>
+ &ldquo;Well, now I suppose I may yawn, or do what I like?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You may, madam,&rdquo; said Triplet, gravely. &ldquo;I have forfeited what little
+ control I had over you, madam.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they sat opposite each other, in mournful silence. At length the
+ actress suddenly rose. She struggled fiercely against her depression, and
+ vowed that melancholy should not benumb her spirits and her power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He ought to have been here by this time,&rdquo; said she to herself. &ldquo;Well, I
+ will not mope for him. I must do something. Triplet,&rdquo; said she.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Madam.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, madam.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She sat gently down again, and leaned her head on her hand, and thought.
+ She was beautiful as she thought!&mdash;her body seemed bristling with
+ mind! At last, her thoughtful gravity was illumined by a smile. She had
+ thought out something <i>excogitaverat.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Triplet, the picture is quite ruined!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, madam. And a coach-load of criticism coming!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Triplet, we actors and actresses have often bright ideas.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, ma am.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When we take other people's!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He, he!&rdquo; went Triplet. &ldquo;Those are our best, madam!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, sir, I have got a bright idea.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You don't say so, ma'am!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't be a brute, dear!&rdquo; said the lady gravely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet stared!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When I was in France, taking lessons of Dumesnil, one of the actors of
+ the Theatre Francais had his portrait painted by a rising artist. The
+ others were to come and see it. They determined, beforehand, to mortify
+ the painter and the sitter, by abusing the work in good set terms. But
+ somehow this got wind, and the patients resolved to be the physicians.
+ They put their heads together, and contrived that the living face should
+ be in the canvas, surrounded by the accessories; these, of course, were
+ painted. Enter the actors, who played their little prearranged farce; and,
+ when they had each given the picture a slap, the picture rose and laughed
+ in their faces, and discomfited them! By the by, the painter did not stop
+ there; he was not content with a short laugh, he laughed at them five
+ hundred years!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good gracious, Mrs. Woffington!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He painted a picture of the whole thing; and as his work is immortal,
+ ours an April snow-flake, he has got tremendously the better of those rash
+ little satirists. Well, Trip, what is sauce for the gander is sauce for
+ the goose; so give me the sharpest knife in the house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet gave her a knife, and looked confused, while she cut away the face
+ of the picture, and by dint of scraping, cutting, and measuring, got her
+ face two parts through the canvas. She then made him take his brush and
+ paint all round her face, so that the transition might not be too abrupt.
+ Several yards of green baize were also produced. This was to be disposed
+ behind the easel, so as to conceal her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet painted here, and touched and retouched there. While thus
+ occupied, he said, in his calm, resigned way: &ldquo;It won't do, madam. I
+ suppose you know that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know nothing,&rdquo; was the reply: &ldquo;life is a guess. I don't think we could
+ deceive Roxalana and Lucy this way, because their eyes are without colored
+ spectacles; but, when people have once begun to see by prejudices and
+ judge by jargon what can't be done with them? Who knows? do you? I don't;
+ so let us try.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I beg your pardon, madam; my brush touched your face.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No offense, sir; I am used to that. And I beg, if you can't tone the rest
+ of the picture up to me, that you will instantly tone me down to the rest.
+ Let us be in tune, whatever it costs, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will avail myself of the privilege, madam, but sparingly. Failure,
+ which is certain, madam, will cover us with disgrace.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing is certain in this life, sir, except that you are a goose. It
+ succeeded in France; and England can match all Europe for fools. Besides,
+ it will be well done. They say Davy Garrick can turn his eyes into bottled
+ gooseberries. Well, Peg Woffington will turn hers into black currants.
+ Haven't you done? I wonder they have not come. Make haste!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They will know by its beauty I never did it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is a sensible remark, Trip. But I think they will rather argue
+ backward; that, as you did it, it cannot be beautiful, and so cannot be
+ me. Your reputation will be our shield.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, madam, now you mention it, they are like enough to take that
+ ground. They despise all I do; if they did not&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You would despise them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this moment the pair were startled by the sound of a coach. Triplet
+ turned as pale as ashes. Mrs. Woffington had her misgivings; but, not
+ choosing to increase the difficulty, she would not let Triplet, whose
+ self-possession she doubted, see any sign of emotion in her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lock the door,&rdquo; said she, firmly, &ldquo;and don't be silly. Now hold up my
+ green baize petticoat, and let me be in a half-light. Now put that table
+ and those chairs before me, so that they can't come right up to me; and,
+ Triplet, don't let them come within six yards, if you can help it. Say it
+ is unfinished, and so must be seen from a focus.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A focus! I don't know what you mean.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No more do I; no more will they, perhaps; and if they don't they will
+ swallow it directly. Unlock the door. Are they coming?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They are only at the first stair.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Triplet, your face is a book, where one may read strange matters. For
+ Heaven's sake, compose yourself. Let all the risk lie in one countenance.
+ Look at me, sir. Make your face like the Book of Daniel in a Jew's back
+ parlor. Volto Sciolto is your cue.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Madam, madam, how your tongue goes! I hear them on the stairs. Pray don't
+ speak!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you know what we are going to do?&rdquo; continued the tormenting Peggy. &ldquo;We
+ are going to weigh goose's feathers! to criticise criticism, Trip&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush! hush!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A grampus was heard outside the door, and Triplet opened it. There was
+ Quin leading the band.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have a care, sir,&rdquo; cried Triplet; &ldquo;there is a hiatus the third step from
+ the door.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A <i>gradus ad Parnassum</i> a wanting,&rdquo; said Mr. Cibber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet's heart sank. The hole had been there six months, and he had found
+ nothing witty to say about it, and at first sight Mr. Cibber had done its
+ business. And on such men he and his portrait were to attempt a
+ preposterous delusion. Then there was Snarl, who wrote critiques on
+ painting, and guided the national taste. The unlucky exhibitor was in a
+ cold sweat. He led the way, like a thief going to the gallows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The picture being unfinished, gentlemen,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;must, if you would do
+ me justice, be seen from a&mdash;a focus; must be judged from here, I
+ mean.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where, sir?&rdquo; said Mr. Cibber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;About here, sir, if you please,&rdquo; said poor Triplet faintly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It looks like a finished picture from here,&rdquo; said Mrs. Clive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, madam,&rdquo; groaned Triplet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They all took up a position, and Triplet timidly raised his eyes along
+ with the rest. He was a little surprised. The actress had flattened her
+ face! She had done all that could be done, and more than he had conceived
+ possible, in the way of extracting life and the atmosphere of expression
+ from her countenance. She was &ldquo;dead still!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a pause. Triplet fluttered. At last some of them spoke as
+ follows:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Soaper.</i> &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Quin.</i> &ldquo;Ho!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Clive.</i> &ldquo;Eh!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Cibber.</i> &ldquo;Humph!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These interjections are small on paper, but as the good creatures uttered
+ them they were eloquent; there was a cheerful variety of dispraise
+ skillfully thrown into each of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; continued Soaper, with his everlasting smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the fun began.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May I be permitted to ask whose portrait this is?&rdquo; said Mr. Cibber slyly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I distinctly told you, it was to be Peg Woffington's,&rdquo; said Mrs. Clive.
+ &ldquo;I think you might take my word.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you act as truly as you paint?&rdquo; said Quin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your fame runs no risk from me, sir!&rdquo; replied Triplet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is not like Peggy's beauty! Eh?&rdquo; rejoined Quin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can't agree with you,&rdquo; cried Kitty Clive. &ldquo;I think it a very pretty
+ face; and not at all like Peg Woffington's.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Compare paint with paint,&rdquo; said Quin. &ldquo;Are you sure you ever saw down to
+ Peggy's real face?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet had seen with alarm that Mr. Snarl spoke not; many satirical
+ expressions crossed his face, but he said nothing. Triplet gathered from
+ this that he had at once detected the trick. &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; thought Triplet, &ldquo;he
+ means to quiz them, as well as expose me. He is hanging back; and, in
+ point of fact, a mighty satirist like Snarl would naturally choose to quiz
+ six people rather than two.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now I call it beautiful!&rdquo; said the traitor Soaper. &ldquo;So calm and
+ reposeful; no particular expression.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;None whatever,&rdquo; said Snarl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gentlemen,&rdquo; said Triplet, &ldquo;does it never occur to you that the fine arts
+ are tender violets, and cannot blow when the north winds&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Blow!&rdquo; inserted Quin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are so cursed cutting?&rdquo; continued Triplet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My good sir, I am never cutting!&rdquo; smirked Soaper. &ldquo;My dear Snarl,&rdquo; whined
+ he, &ldquo;give us the benefit of your practiced judgment. Do justice to this
+ ad-mirable work of art,&rdquo; drawled the traitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will!&rdquo; said Mr. Snarl; and placed himself before the picture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What on earth will he say?&rdquo; thought Triplet. &ldquo;I can see by his face he
+ has found us out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Snarl delivered a short critique. Mr. Snarl's intelligence was not
+ confined to his phrases; all critics use intelligent phrases and
+ philosophical truths. But this gentleman's manner was very intelligent; it
+ was pleasant, quiet, assured, and very convincing. Had the reader or I
+ been there, he would have carried us with him, as he did his hearers; and
+ as his successors carry the public with them now.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your brush is by no means destitute of talent, Mr. Triplet,&rdquo; said Mr.
+ Snarl. &ldquo;But you are somewhat deficient, at present, in the great
+ principles of your art; the first of which is a loyal adherence to truth.
+ Beauty itself is but one of the forms of truth, and nature is our finite
+ exponent of infinite truth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His auditors gave him a marked attention. They could not but acknowledge
+ that men who go to the bottom of things like this should be the best
+ instructors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, in nature, a woman's face at this distance&mdash;ay, even at this
+ short distance&mdash;melts into the air. There is none of that sharpness;
+ but, on the contrary, a softness of outline.&rdquo; He made a lorgnette of his
+ two hands; the others did so too, and found they saw much better&mdash;oh,
+ ever so much better! &ldquo;Whereas yours,&rdquo; resumed Snarl, &ldquo;is hard; and,
+ forgive me, rather tea-board like. Then your <i>chiaro scuro,</i> my good
+ sir, is very defective; for instance, in nature, the nose, intercepting
+ the light on one side the face, throws, of necessity, a shadow under the
+ eye. Caravaggio, Venetians generally, and the Bolognese masters, do
+ particular justice to this. No such shade appears in this portrait.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Tis so, stop my vitals!&rdquo; observed Colley Cibber. And they all looked,
+ and, having looked, wagged their heads in assent&mdash;as the fat, white
+ lords at Christie's waggle fifty pounds more out for a copy of Rembrandt,
+ a brown levitical Dutchman, visible in the pitch-dark by some sleight of
+ sun Newton had not wit to discover.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soaper dissented from the mass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, my dear Snarl, if there are no shades, there are lights, loads of
+ lights.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There are,&rdquo; replied Snarl; &ldquo;only they are impossible, that is all. You
+ have, however,&rdquo; concluded he, with a manner slightly supercilious,
+ &ldquo;succeeded in the mechanical parts; the hair and the dress are well, Mr.
+ Triplet; but your Woffington is not a woman, not nature.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They all nodded and waggled assent; but this sagacious motion was arrested
+ as by an earthquake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The picture rang out, in the voice of a clarion, an answer that outlived
+ the speaker: &ldquo;She's a woman! for she has taken four men in! She's nature!
+ for a fluent dunce doesn't know her when he sees her!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Imagine the tableau! It was charming! Such opening of eyes and mouths!
+ Cibber fell by second nature into an attitude of the old comedy. And all
+ were rooted where they stood, with surprise and incipient mortification,
+ except Quin, who slapped his knee, and took the trick at its value.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peg Woffington slipped out of the green baize, and, coming round from the
+ back of the late picture, stood in person before them; while they looked
+ alternately at her and at the hole in the canvas. She then came at each of
+ them in turn, <i>more dramatico.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A pretty face, and not like Woffington. I owe you two, Kate Clive.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who ever saw Peggy's real face? Look at it now if you can without
+ blushing, Mr. Quin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quin, a good-humored fellow, took the wisest view of his predicament, and
+ burst into a hearty laugh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For all this,&rdquo; said Mr. Snarl, peevishly, &ldquo;I maintain, upon the
+ unalterable principles of art&mdash;&rdquo; At this they all burst into a roar,
+ not sorry to shift the ridicule. &ldquo;Goths!&rdquo; cried Snarl, fiercely.
+ &ldquo;Good-morning, ladies and gentlemen,&rdquo; cried Mr. Snarl, <i>avec intention,</i>
+ &ldquo;I have a criticism to write of last night's performance.&rdquo; The laugh died
+ away to a quaver. &ldquo;I shall sit on your pictures one day, Mr. Brush.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't sit on them with your head downward, or you'll addle them,&rdquo; said
+ Mr. Brush, fiercely. This was the first time Triplet had ever answered a
+ foe. Mrs. Woffington gave him an eloquent glance of encouragement. He
+ nodded his head in infantine exultation at what he had done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, Soaper,&rdquo; said Mr. Snarl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Soaper lingered one moment to say: &ldquo;You shall always have my good
+ word, Mr. Triplet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will try&mdash;and not deserve it, Mr. Soaper,&rdquo; was the prompt reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Serve 'em right,&rdquo; said Mr. Cibber, as soon as the door had closed upon
+ them; &ldquo;for a couple of serpents, or rather one boa-constrictor. Soaper
+ slavers, for Snarl to crush. But we were all a little too hard on Triplet
+ here; and, if he will accept my apology&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, sir,&rdquo; said Triplet, half trembling, but driven on by looks from Mrs.
+ Woffington, &ldquo;'Cibber's Apology' is found to be a trifle wearisome.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Confound his impertinence!&rdquo; cried the astounded laureate. &ldquo;Come along,
+ Jemmy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, sir,&rdquo; said Quin, good-humoredly, &ldquo;we must give a joke and take a
+ joke. And when he paints my portrait&mdash;which he shall do&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The bear from Hockley Hole shall sit for the head!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Curse his impudence!&rdquo; roared Quin. &ldquo;I'm at your service, Mr. Cibber,&rdquo;
+ added he, in huge dudgeon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Away went the two old boys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mighty well!&rdquo; said waspish Mrs. Clive. &ldquo;I did intend you should have
+ painted Mrs. Clive. But after this impertinence&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You will continue to do it yourself, ma'am!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was Triplet's hour of triumph. His exultation was undignified, and
+ such as is said to precede a fall. He inquired gravely of Mrs. Woffington,
+ whether he had or had not shown a spirit. Whether he had or had not fired
+ into each a parting shot, as they sheered off. To repair which, it might
+ be advisable for them to put into friendly ports.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tremendous!&rdquo; was the reply. &ldquo;And when Snarl and Soaper sit on your next
+ play, they won't forget the lesson you have given them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll be sworn they won't!&rdquo; chuckled Triplet. But, reconsidering her
+ words, he looked blank, and muttered: &ldquo;Then perhaps it would have been
+ more prudent to let them alone!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Incalculably more prudent!&rdquo; was the reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then why did you set me on, madam?&rdquo; said Triplet, reproachfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because I wanted amusement, and my head ached,&rdquo; was the cool answer,
+ somewhat languidly given.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I defy the coxcombs!&rdquo; cried Triplet, with reviving spirit. &ldquo;But real
+ criticism I respect, honor, and bow to. Such as yours, madam; or such as
+ that sweet lady's at Mr. Vane's would have been; or, in fact, anybody's
+ who appreciates me. Oh, madam, I wanted to ask you, was it not strange
+ your not being at Mr. Vane's, after all, to-day?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was at Mr. Vane's, Triplet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You were? Why, I came with my verses, and she said you were not there! I
+ will go fetch the verses.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no! Who said I was not there?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did I not tell you? The charming young lady who helped me with her own
+ hand to everything on the table. What wine that gentleman possesses!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Was it a young lady, Triplet?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not more than two-and-twenty, I should say.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In a traveling-dress?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I could not see her dress, madam, for her beauty&mdash;brown hair, blue
+ eyes, charming in conversation&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! What did she tell you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She told me, madam&mdash;Ahem!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, what did you tell her? And what did she answer?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I told her that I came with verses for you, ordered by Mr. Vane. That he
+ admired you. I descanted, madam, on your virtues, which had made him your
+ slave.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go on,&rdquo; said Mrs. Woffington, encouraging him with a deceitful smile.
+ &ldquo;Tell me all you told her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That you were sitting to me for your portrait, the destination of which
+ was not doubtful. That I lived at 10, Hercules Buildings.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You told that lady all this?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I give my honor. She was so kind, I opened my heart to her. But tell me
+ now, madam,&rdquo; said Triplet, joyously dancing round the Woffington volcano,
+ &ldquo;do you know this charming lady?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I congratulate you, madam. An acquaintance worthy even of you; and there
+ are not many such. Who is she, madam?&rdquo; continued Triplet, lively with
+ curiosity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mrs. Vane,&rdquo; was the quiet, grim answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mrs. Vane? His mother? No&mdash;am I mad? His sister! Oh, I see, his&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His wife!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His wife! Why, then, Mr. Vane's married?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, look there!&mdash;Oh, look here now! Well, but, good Heavens! she
+ wasn't to know you were there, perhaps?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But then I let the cat out of the bag?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, good gracious! there will be some serious mischief!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No doubt of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And it is all my fault?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I've played the deuce with their married happiness?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Probably.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And ten to one if you are not incensed against me too?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Woffington replied by looking him in the face, and turning her back
+ upon him. She walked hastily to the window, threw it open, and looked out
+ of it, leaving poor Triplet to very unpleasant reflections. She was so
+ angry with him she dared not trust herself to speak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just my luck,&rdquo; thought he. &ldquo;I had a patron and a benefactress; I have
+ betrayed them both.&rdquo; Suddenly an idea struck him. &ldquo;Madam,&rdquo; said he,
+ timorously, &ldquo;see what these fine gentlemen are! What business had he, with
+ a wife at home, to come and fall in love with you? I do it forever in my
+ plays&mdash;I am obliged&mdash;they would be so dull else; but in <i>real</i>
+ life to do it is abominable.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You forget, sir,&rdquo; replied Mrs. Woffington, without moving, &ldquo;that I am an
+ actress&mdash;a plaything for the impertinence of puppies and the
+ treachery of hypocrites. Fool! to think there was an honest man in the
+ world, and that he had shone on me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With these words she turned, and Triplet was shocked to see the change in
+ her face. She was pale, and her black, lowering brows were gloomy and
+ terrible. She walked like a tigress to and fro, and Triplet dared not
+ speak to her. Indeed she seemed but half conscious of his presence. He
+ went for nobody with her. How little we know the people we eat and go to
+ church and flirt with! Triplet had imagined this creature an incarnation
+ of gayety, a sportive being, the daughter of smiles, the bride of mirth;
+ needed but a look at her now to see that her heart was a volcano, her
+ bosom a boiling gulf of fiery lava. She walked like some wild creature;
+ she flung her hands up to heaven with a passionate despair, before which
+ the feeble spirit of her companion shrank and cowered; and, with quivering
+ lips and blazing eyes, she burst into a torrent of passionate bitterness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But who is Margaret Woffington,&rdquo; she cried, &ldquo;that she should pretend to
+ honest love, or feel insulted by the proffer of a stolen regard? And what
+ have we to do with homes, or hearts, or firesides? Have we not the
+ playhouse, its paste diamonds, its paste feelings, and the loud applause
+ of fops and sots&mdash;hearts?&mdash;beneath loads of tinsel and paint?
+ Nonsense! The love that can go with souls to heaven&mdash;such love for
+ us? Nonsense! These men applaud us, cajole us, swear to us, flatter us;
+ and yet, forsooth, we would have them respect us too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear benefactress,&rdquo; said Triplet, &ldquo;they are not worthy of you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thought this man was not all dross; from the first I never felt his
+ passion an insult. Oh, Triplet! I could have loved this man&mdash;really
+ loved him! and I longed so to be good. Oh, God! oh, God!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank Heaven, you don't love him!&rdquo; cried Triplet, hastily. &ldquo;Thank Heaven
+ for that!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Love him? Love a man who comes to me with a silly second-hand affection
+ from his insipid baby-face, and offers me half, or two-thirds, or a third
+ of his worthless heart? I hate him! and her! and all the world!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is what I call a very proper feeling,&rdquo; said poor Triplet, with a
+ weak attempt to soothe her. &ldquo;Then break with him at once, and all will be
+ well.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Break with him? Are you mad? No! Since he plays with the tools of my
+ trade I shall fool him worse than he has me. I will feed his passion full,
+ tempt him, torture him, play with him, as the angler plays a fish upon his
+ hook. And, when his very life depends on me, then by degrees he shall see
+ me cool, and cool, and freeze into bitter aversion. Then he shall rue the
+ hour he fought with the Devil against my soul, and played false with a
+ brain and heart like mine!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But his poor wife? You will have pity on her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His wife! Are wives' hearts the only hearts that throb, and burn, and
+ break? His wife must defend herself. It is not from me that mercy can come
+ to her, nor from her to me. I loathe her, and I shall not forget that you
+ took her part. Only, if you are her friend, take my advice, don't you
+ assist her. I shall defeat her without that. Let her fight <i>her</i>
+ battle, and <i>I</i> mine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, madam! she cannot fight; she is a dove.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are a fool! What do you know about women? You were with her five
+ minutes, and she turned you inside out. My life on it, while I have been
+ fooling my time here, she is in the field, with all the arts of our sex,
+ simplicity at the head of them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet was making a futile endeavor to convert her to his view of her
+ rival, when a knock suddenly came to his door. A slovenly girl, one of his
+ own neighbors, brought him a bit of paper, with a line written in pencil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Tis from a lady, who waits below,&rdquo; said the girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Woffington went again to the window, and there she saw getting out of
+ a coach, and attended by James Burdock, Mabel Vane, who had sent up her
+ name on the back of an old letter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What shall I do?&rdquo; said Triplet, as soon as he recovered the first
+ stunning effects of this <i>contretemps.</i> To his astonishment, Mrs.
+ Woffington bade the girl show the lady upstairs. The girl went down on
+ this errand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But <i>you</i> are here,&rdquo; remonstrated Triplet. &ldquo;Oh, to be sure, you can
+ go into the other room. There is plenty of time to avoid her,&rdquo; said
+ Triplet, in a very natural tremor. &ldquo;This way, madam!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Woffington stood in the middle of the room like a statue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What does she come here for?&rdquo; said she, sternly. &ldquo;You have not told me
+ all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't know,&rdquo; cried poor Triplet, in dismay; &ldquo;and I think the Devil
+ brings her here to confound me. For Heaven's sake, retire! What will
+ become of us all? There will be murder, I know there will!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To his horror, Mrs. Woffington would not move. &ldquo;You are on her side,&rdquo; said
+ she slowly, with a concentration of spite and suspicion. She looked
+ frightful at this moment. &ldquo;All the better for me,&rdquo; added she, with a world
+ of female malignity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet could not make head against this blow; he gasped, and pointed
+ piteously to the inner door. &ldquo;No; I will know two things: the course she
+ means to take, and the terms you two are upon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time Mrs. Vane's light foot was heard on the stair, and Triplet
+ sank into a chair. &ldquo;They will tear one another to pieces,&rdquo; said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A tap came to the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked fearfully round for the woman whom jealousy had so speedily
+ turned from an angel to a fiend; and saw with dismay that she had actually
+ had the hardihood to slip round and enter the picture again. She had not
+ quite arranged herself when her rival knocked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet dragged himself to the door. Before he opened it, he looked
+ fearfully over his shoulder, and received a glance of cool, bitter, deadly
+ hostility, that boded ill both for him and his visitor. Triplet's
+ apprehensions were not unreasonable. His benefactress and this sweet lady
+ were rivals!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jealousy is a dreadful passion, it makes us tigers. The jealous always
+ thirst for blood. At any moment when reason is a little weaker than usual,
+ they are ready to kill the thing they hate, or the thing they love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Any open collision between these ladies would scatter ill consequences all
+ round. Under such circumstances, we are pretty sure to say or do something
+ wicked, silly, or unreasonable. But what tortured Triplet more than
+ anything was his own particular notion that fate doomed him to witness a
+ formal encounter between these two women, and of course an encounter of
+ such a nature as we in our day illustrate by &ldquo;Kilkenny cats.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To be sure Mrs. Vane had appeared a dove, but doves can peck on certain
+ occasions, and no doubt she had a spirit at bottom. Her coming to him
+ proved it. And had not the other been a dove all the morning and
+ afternoon? Yet, jealousy had turned her to a fiend before his eyes. Then
+ if (which was not probable) no collision took place, what a situation was
+ his! Mrs. Woffington (his buckler from starvation) suspected him, and
+ would distort every word that came from Mrs. Vane's lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet's situation was, in fact, that of AEneas in the storm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Olim et haec meminisse juvabit&mdash;&rdquo; &ldquo;But, while present, such things
+ don't please any one a bit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the sort of situation we can laugh at, and see the fun of it six
+ months after, if not shipwrecked on it at the time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a ghastly smile the poor quaking hypocrite welcomed Mrs. Vane, and
+ professed a world of innocent delight that she had so honored his humble
+ roof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She interrupted his compliments, and begged him to see whether she was
+ followed by a gentleman in a cloak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet looked out of the window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Charles Pomander!&rdquo; gasped he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles was at the very door. If, however, he had intended to mount
+ the stairs he changed his mind, for he suddenly went off round the corner
+ with a businesslike air, real or fictitious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is gone, madam,&rdquo; said Triplet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Vane, the better to escape detection or observation, wore a thick
+ mantle and a hood that concealed her features. Of these Triplet
+ debarrassed her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sit down, madam;&rdquo; and he hastily drew a chair so that her back was to the
+ picture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was pale, and trembled a little. She hid her face in her hands a
+ moment, then, recovering her courage, &ldquo;she begged Mr. Triplet to pardon
+ her for coming to him. He had inspired her with confidence,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;he
+ had offered her his services, and so she had come to him, for she had no
+ other friend to aid her in her sore distress.&rdquo; She might have added, that
+ with the tact of her sex she had read Triplet to the bottom, and came to
+ him, as she would to a benevolent, muscular old woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet's natural impulse was to repeat most warmly his offers of service.
+ He did so; and then, conscious of the picture, had a misgiving.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dear Mr. Triplet,&rdquo; began Mrs. Vane, &ldquo;you know this person, Mrs.
+ Woffington?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, madam,&rdquo; replied Triplet, lowering his eyes, &ldquo;I am honored by her
+ acquaintance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You will take me to the theater where she acts?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, madam; to the boxes, I presume?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No! oh, no! How could I bear that? To the place where the actors and
+ actresses are.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet demurred. This would be courting that very collision, the dread of
+ which even now oppressed him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the first faint sign of resistance she began to supplicate him, as if
+ he was some great, stern tyrant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, you must not, you cannot refuse me. You do not know what I risk to
+ obtain this. I have risen from my bed to come to you. I have a fire here!&rdquo;
+ She pressed her hand to her brow. &ldquo;Oh, take me to her!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Madam, I will do anything for you. But be advised; trust to my knowledge
+ of human nature. What you require is madness. Gracious Heavens! you two
+ are rivals, and when rivals meet there's murder or deadly mischief.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! if you knew my sorrow, you would not thwart me. Oh, Mr. Triplet!
+ little did I think you were as cruel as the rest.&rdquo; So then this cruel
+ monster whimpered out that he should do any folly she insisted upon.
+ &ldquo;Good, kind Mr. Triplet!&rdquo; said Mrs. Vane. &ldquo;Let me look in your face? Yes,
+ I see you are honest and true. I will tell you all.&rdquo; Then she poured in
+ his ear her simple tale, unadorned and touching as Judah's speech to
+ Joseph. She told him how she loved her husband; how he had loved her; how
+ happy they were for the first six months; how her heart sank when he left
+ her; how he had promised she should join him, and on that hope she lived.
+ &ldquo;But for two months he had ceased to speak of this, and I grew heart-sick
+ waiting for the summons that never came. At last I felt I should die if I
+ did not see him; so I plucked up courage and wrote that I must come to
+ him. He did not forbid me, so I left our country home. Oh, sir! I cannot
+ make you know how my heart burned to be by his side. I counted the hours
+ of the journey; I counted the miles. At last I reached his house; I found
+ a gay company there. I was a little sorry, but I said: 'His friends shall
+ be welcome, right welcome. He has asked them to welcome his wife.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poor thing!&rdquo; muttered Triplet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Mr. Triplet! they were there to do honor to &mdash;&mdash;, and the
+ wife was neither expected nor desired. There lay my letters with their
+ seals unbroken. I know all <i>his</i> letters by heart, Mr. Triplet. The
+ seals unbroken&mdash;unbroken! Mr. Triplet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is abominable!&rdquo; cried Triplet fiercely. &ldquo;And she who sat in my seat&mdash;in
+ his house, and in his heart&mdash;was this lady, the actress you so
+ praised to me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That lady, ma'am,&rdquo; said Triplet, &ldquo;has been deceived as well as you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am convinced of it,&rdquo; said Mabel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And it is my painful duty to tell you, madam, that, with all her talents
+ and sweetness, she has a fiery temper; yes, a very fiery temper,&rdquo;
+ continued Triplet, stoutly, though with an uneasy glance in a certain
+ direction; &ldquo;and I have reason to believe she is angry, and thinks more of
+ her own ill-usage than yours. Don't you go near her. Trust to my knowledge
+ of the sex, madam; I am a dramatic writer. Did you ever read the 'Rival
+ Queens'?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thought not. Well, madam, one stabs the other, and the one that is
+ stabbed says things to the other that are more biting than steel. The
+ prudent course for you is to keep apart, and be always cheerful, and
+ welcome him with a smile&mdash;and&mdash;have you read 'The Way to keep
+ him'?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, Mr. Triplet,&rdquo; said Mabel, firmly, &ldquo;I cannot feign. Were I to attempt
+ talent and deceit, I should be weaker than I am now. Honesty and right are
+ all my strength. I will cry to her for justice and mercy. And if I cry in
+ vain, I shall die, Mr. Triplet, that is all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't cry, dear lady,&rdquo; said Triplet, in a broken voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is impossible!&rdquo; cried she, suddenly. &ldquo;I am not learned, but I can read
+ faces. I always could, and so could my Aunt Deborah before me. I read you
+ right, Mr. Triplet, and I have read her too. Did not my heart warm to her
+ among them all? There is a heart at the bottom of all her acting, and that
+ heart is good and noble.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She is, madam! she is! and charitable too. I know a family she saved from
+ starvation and despair. Oh, yes! she has a heart&mdash;to feel for the <i>poor,</i>
+ at all events.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And am I not the poorest of the poor?&rdquo; cried Mrs. Vane. &ldquo;I have no father
+ nor mother, Mr. Triplet; my husband is all I have in the world&mdash;all I
+ <i>had,</i> I mean.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet, deeply affected himself, stole a look at Mrs. Woffington. She was
+ pale; but her face was composed into a sort of dogged obstinacy. He was
+ disgusted with her. &ldquo;Madam,&rdquo; said he, sternly, &ldquo;there is a wild beast more
+ cruel and savage than wolves and bears; it is called 'a rival,' and don't
+ you get in its way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this moment, in spite of Triplet's precaution, Mrs. Vane, casting her
+ eye accidentally round, caught sight of the picture, and instantly started
+ up, crying, &ldquo;She is there!&rdquo; Triplet was thunderstruck. &ldquo;What likeness!&rdquo;
+ cried she, and moved toward the supposed picture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't go to it!&rdquo; cried Triplet, aghast; &ldquo;the color is wet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She stopped; but her eye and her very soul dwelt upon the supposed
+ picture; and Triplet stood quaking. &ldquo;How like! It seems to breathe. You
+ are a great painter, sir. A glass is not truer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet, hardly knowing what he said, muttered something about &ldquo;critics
+ and lights and shades.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then they are blind!&rdquo; cried Mabel, never for a moment removing her eye
+ from the object. &ldquo;Tell me not of lights and shades. The pictures I see
+ have a look of paint; but yours looks like life. Oh, that she were here,
+ as this <i>wonderful</i> image of hers is. I would speak to her. I am not
+ wise or learned; but orators never pleaded as I would plead to her for my
+ Ernest's heart.&rdquo; Still her eye glanced upon the picture; and I suppose her
+ heart realized an actual presence, though her judgment did not; for by
+ some irresistible impulse she sank slowly down and stretched her clasped
+ hands toward it, while sobs and words seemed to break direct from her
+ bursting heart. &ldquo;Oh, yes! you are beautiful, you are gifted, and the eyes
+ of thousands wait upon your very word and look. What wonder that he,
+ ardent, refined, and genial, should lay his heart at your feet? And I have
+ nothing but my love to make him love me. I cannot take him from you. Oh,
+ be generous to the weak! Oh, give him back to me! What is one heart more
+ to you? You are so rich, and I am so poor, that without his love I have
+ nothing, and can do nothing but sit me down and cry till my heart breaks.
+ Give him back to me, beautiful, terrible woman! for, with all your gifts,
+ you cannot love him as his poor Mabel does; and I will love you longer
+ perhaps than men can love. I will kiss your feet, and Heaven above will
+ bless you; and I will bless you and pray for you to my dying day. Ah! it
+ is alive! I am frightened! I am frightened!&rdquo; She ran to Triplet and seized
+ his arm. &ldquo;No!&rdquo; cried she, quivering close to him; &ldquo;I'm not frightened, for
+ it was for me she&mdash;Oh, Mrs. Woffington!&rdquo; and, hiding her face on Mr.
+ Triplet's shoulder, she blushed, and wept, and trembled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What was it had betrayed Mrs. Woffington? <i>A tear!</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the whole of this interview (which had taken a turn so unlooked for
+ by the listener) she might have said with Beatrice, &ldquo;What fire is in mine
+ ears?&rdquo; and what self-reproach and chill misgiving in her heart too. She
+ had passed through a hundred emotions, as the young innocent wife told her
+ sad and simple story. But, anxious now above all things to escape without
+ being recognized&mdash;for she had long repented having listened at all,
+ or placed herself in her present position&mdash;she fiercely mastered her
+ countenance; but, though she ruled her features, she could not rule her
+ heart. And when the young wife, instead of inveighing against her, came to
+ her as a supplicant, with faith in her goodness, and sobbed to her for
+ pity, a big tear rolled down her cheek, and proved her something more than
+ a picture or an actress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Vane, as we have related, screamed and ran to Triplet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Woffington came instantly from her frame, and stood before them in a
+ despairing attitude, with one hand upon her brow. For a single moment her
+ impulse was to fly from the apartment, so ashamed was she of having
+ listened, and of meeting her rival in this way; but she conquered this
+ feeling, and, as soon as she saw Mrs. Vane too had recovered some
+ composure, she said to Triplet, in a low but firm voice:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Leave us, sir. No living creature must hear what I say to this lady!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet remonstrated, but Mrs. Vane said, faintly:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, yes, good Mr. Triplet, I would rather you left me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet, full of misgivings, was obliged to retire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be composed, ladies,&rdquo; said he piteously. &ldquo;Neither of you could help it;&rdquo;
+ and so he entered his inner room, where he sat and listened nervously, for
+ he could not shake off all apprehension of a personal encounter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the room he had left there was a long, uneasy silence. Both ladies were
+ greatly embarrassed. It was the actress who spoke first. All trace of
+ emotion, except a certain pallor, was driven from her face. She spoke with
+ very marked courtesy, but in tones that seemed to freeze as they dropped
+ one by one from her mouth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I trust, madam, you will do me the justice to believe I did not know Mr.
+ Vane was married?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sure of it!&rdquo; said Mabel, warmly. &ldquo;I feel you are as good as you are
+ gifted.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mrs. Vane, I am not!&rdquo; said the other, almost sternly. &ldquo;You are deceived!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then Heaven have mercy on me! No! I am not deceived, you pitied me. You
+ speak coldly now; but I know your face and your heart&mdash;you pity me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do respect, admire, and pity you,&rdquo; said Mrs. Woffington, sadly; &ldquo;and I
+ could consent nevermore to communicate with your&mdash;with Mr. Vane.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; cried Mabel; &ldquo;Heaven will bless you! But will you give me back his
+ heart?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How can I do that?&rdquo; said Mrs. Woffington, uneasily; she had not bargained
+ for this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The magnet can repel as well as attract. Can you not break your own
+ spell? What will his presence be to me, if his heart remain behind?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You ask much of me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas! I do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I could do even this.&rdquo; She paused for breath. &ldquo;And perhaps if you,
+ who have not only touched my heart, but won my respect, were to say to me,
+ 'Do so,' I should do it.&rdquo; Again she paused, and spoke with difficulty; for
+ the bitter struggle took away her breath. &ldquo;Mr. Vane thinks better of me
+ than I deserve. I have&mdash;only&mdash;to make him believe me&mdash;worthless&mdash;worse
+ than I am&mdash;and he will drop me like an adder&mdash;and love you
+ better, far better&mdash;for having known&mdash;admired&mdash;and despised
+ Margaret Woffington.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; cried Mabel, &ldquo;I shall bless you every hour of my life.&rdquo; Her
+ countenance brightened into rapture at the picture, and Mrs. Woffington's
+ darkened with bitterness as she watched her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Mabel reflected. &ldquo;Rob you of your good name?&rdquo; said this pure creature.
+ &ldquo;Ah, Mabel Vane! you think but of yourself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thank you, madam,&rdquo; said Mrs. Woffington, a little touched by this
+ unexpected trait; &ldquo;but some one must suffer here, and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mabel Vane interrupted her. &ldquo;This would be cruel and base,&rdquo; said she
+ firmly. &ldquo;No woman's forehead shall be soiled by me. Oh, madam! beauty is
+ admired, talent is adored; but virtue is a woman's crown. With it, the
+ poor are rich; without it, the rich are poor. It walks through life
+ upright, and never hides its head for high or low.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her face was as the face of an angel now; and the actress, conquered by
+ her beauty and her goodness, actually bowed her head and gently kissed the
+ hand of the country wife whom she had quizzed a few hours ago.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Frailty paid this homage to virtue!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mabel Vane hardly noticed it; her eye was lifted to heaven, and her heart
+ was gone there for help in a sore struggle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This would be to assassinate you; no less. And so, madam,&rdquo; she sighed,
+ &ldquo;with God's help, I do refuse your offer; choosing rather, if needs be, to
+ live desolate, but innocent&mdash;many a better than I hath lived so&mdash;ay!
+ if God wills it, to die, with my hopes and my heart crushed, but my hands
+ unstained; for so my humble life has passed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How beautiful, great, and pure goodness is! It paints heaven on the face
+ that has it; it wakens the sleeping souls that meet it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the bottom of Margaret Woffington's heart lay a soul, unknown to the
+ world, scarce known to herself&mdash;a heavenly harp, on which ill airs of
+ passion had been played&mdash;but still it was there, in tune with all
+ that is true, pure, really great and good. And now the flush that a great
+ heart sends to the brow, to herald great actions, came to her cheek and
+ brow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Humble!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;Such as you are the diamonds of our race. You angel
+ of truth and goodness, you have conquered!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, yes! yes! Thank God, yes!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What a fiend I must be could I injure you! The poor heart we have both
+ overrated shall be yours again, and yours for ever. In my hands it is
+ painted glass; in the luster of a love like yours it may become a
+ priceless jewel.&rdquo; She turned her head away and pondered a moment, then
+ suddenly offered to Mrs. Vane her hand with nobleness and majesty; &ldquo;Can
+ you trust me?&rdquo; The actress too was divinely beautiful now, for her good
+ angel shone through her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I could trust you with my life!&rdquo; was the reply.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Ah! if I might call you friend, dear lady, what would I not
+do&mdash;suffer&mdash;resign&mdash;to be worthy that title!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+&ldquo;No, not friend!&rdquo; cried the warm, innocent Mabel; &ldquo;sister! I will call
+you sister. I have no sister.&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Sister!&rdquo; said Mrs. Woffington. &ldquo;Oh, do not mock me! Alas! you do not
+know what you say. That sacred name to me, from lips so pure as yours.
+Mrs. Vane,&rdquo; said she, timidly, &ldquo;would you think me presumptuous if I
+begged you to&mdash;to let me kiss you?&rdquo;
+
+ The words were scarce spoken before Mrs. Vane's arms were wreathed round
+her neck, and that innocent cheek laid sweetly to hers.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Woffington strained her to her bosom, and two great hearts, whose
+ grandeur the world, worshiper of charlatans, never discovered, had found
+ each other out and beat against each other. A great heart is as quick to
+ find another out as the world is slow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Woffington burst into a passion of tears and clasped Mabel tighter
+ and tighter in a half-despairing way. Mabel mistook the cause, but she
+ kissed her tears away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dear sister,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;be comforted. I love you. My heart warmed to you
+ the first moment I saw you. A woman's love and gratitude are something.
+ Ah! you will never find me change. This is for life, look you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God grant it!&rdquo; cried the other poor woman. &ldquo;Oh, it is not that, it is not
+ that; it is because I am so little worthy of this. It is a sin to deceive
+ you. I am not good like you. You do not know me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You do not know yourself if you say so!&rdquo; cried Mabel; and to her hearer
+ the words seemed to come from heaven. &ldquo;I read faces,&rdquo; said Mabel. &ldquo;I read
+ yours at sight, and you are what I set you down; and nobody must breathe a
+ word against you, not even yourself. Do you think I am blind? You are
+ beautiful, you are good, you are my sister, and I love you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Heaven forgive me!&rdquo; thought the other. &ldquo;How can I resign this angel's
+ good opinion? Surely Heaven sends this blessed dew to my parched heart!&rdquo;
+ And now she burned to make good her promise and earn this virtuous wife's
+ love. She folded her once more in her arms, and then, taking her by the
+ hand, led her tenderly into Triplet's inner room. She made her lie down on
+ the bed, and placed pillows high for her like a mother, and leaned over
+ her as she lay, and pressed her lips gently to her forehead. Her fertile
+ brain had already digested a plan, but she had resolved that this pure and
+ candid soul should take no lessons of deceit. &ldquo;Lie there,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;till
+ I open the door: then join us. Do you know what I am going to do? I am not
+ going to restore you your husband's heart, but to show you it never really
+ left you. You read faces; well, I read circumstances. Matters are not as
+ you thought,&rdquo; said she, with all a woman's tact. &ldquo;I cannot explain, but
+ you will see.&rdquo; She then gave Mrs. Triplet peremptory orders not to let her
+ charge rise from the bed until the preconcerted signal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Vane was, in fact, so exhausted by all she had gone through that she
+ was in no condition to resist. She cast a look of childlike confidence
+ upon her rival, and then closed her eyes, and tried not to tremble all
+ over and listen like a frightened hare.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ It is one great characteristic of genius to do great things with little
+ things. Paxton could see that so small a matter as a greenhouse could be
+ dilated into a crystal palace, and with two common materials&mdash;glass
+ and iron&mdash;he raised the palace of the genii; the brightest idea and
+ the noblest ornament added to Europe in this century&mdash;the koh-i-noor
+ of the west. Livy's definition of Archimedes goes on the same ground.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ Peg Woffington was a genius in her way. On entering Triplet's studio her
+ eye fell upon three trifles&mdash;Mrs. Vane's hood and mantle, the back of
+ an old letter, and Mr. Triplet. (It will be seen how she worked these
+ slight materials.) On the letter was written in pencil simply these two
+ words, &ldquo;Mabel Vane.&rdquo; Mrs. Woffington wrote above these words two more,
+ &ldquo;Alone and unprotected.&rdquo; She put this into Mr. Triplet's hand, and bade
+ him take it down stairs and give it Sir Charles Pomander, whose retreat,
+ she knew, must have been fictitious. &ldquo;You will find him round the corner,&rdquo;
+ said she, &ldquo;or in some shop that looks this way.&rdquo; While uttering these
+ words she had put on Mrs. Vane's hood and mantle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No answer was returned, and no Triplet went out of the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She turned, and there he was kneeling on both knees close under her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bid me jump out of that window, madam; bid me kill those two gentlemen,
+ and I will not rebel. You are a great lady, a talented lady; you have been
+ insulted, and no doubt blood will flow. It ought&mdash;it is your due; but
+ that innocent lady, do not compromise her!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Mr. Triplet, you need not kneel to me. I do not wish to force you to
+ render me a service. I have no right to dictate to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, dear!&rdquo; cried Triplet, &ldquo;don't talk in that way. I owe you my life, but
+ I think of your own peace of mind, for you are not one to be happy if you
+ injure the innocent!&rdquo; He rose suddenly, and cried: &ldquo;Madam, promise me not
+ to stir till I come back!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where are you going?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To bring the husband to his wife's feet, and so save one angel from
+ despair, and another angel from a great crime.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I suppose you are wiser than I,&rdquo; said she. &ldquo;But, if you are in
+ earnest, you had better be quick, for somehow I am rather changeable about
+ these people.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You can't help that, madam, it is your sex; you are an angel. May I be
+ permitted to kiss your hand? you are all goodness and gentleness at
+ bottom. I fly to Mr. Vane, and we will be back before you have time to
+ repent, and give the Devil the upper hand again, my dear, good, sweet
+ lady!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Away flew Triplet, all unconscious that he was not Mrs. Woffington's
+ opponent, but puppet. He ran, he tore, animated by a good action, and
+ spurred by the notion that he was in direct competition with the fiend for
+ the possession of his benefactress. He had no sooner turned the corner
+ than Mrs. Woffington, looking out of the window, observed Sir Charles
+ Pomander on the watch, as she had expected. She remained at the window
+ with Mrs. Vane's hood on, until Sir Charles's eye in its wanderings
+ lighted on her, and then, dropping Mrs. Vane's letter from the window, she
+ hastily withdrew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles eagerly picked it up. His eye brightened when he read the
+ short contents. With a self-satisfied smile he mounted the stair. He found
+ in Triplet's house a lady who seemed startled at her late hardihood. She
+ sat with her back to the door, her hood drawn tightly down, and wore an
+ air of trembling consciousness. Sir Charles smiled again. He knew the sex,
+ at least he said so. (It is an assertion often ventured upon.) Accordingly
+ Sir Charles determined to come down from his height, and court nature and
+ innocence in their own tones. This he rightly judged must be the proper
+ course to take with Mrs. Vane. He fell down with mock ardor upon one knee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The supposed Mrs. Vane gave a little squeak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dear Mrs. Vane,&rdquo; cried he, &ldquo;be not alarmed; loveliness neglected, and
+ simplicity deceived, insure respect as well as adoration. Ah!&rdquo; (A sigh.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, get up, sir; do, please. Ah!&rdquo; (A sigh.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You sigh, sweetest of human creatures. Ah! why did not a nature like
+ yours fall into hands that would have cherished it as it deserves? Had
+ Heaven bestowed on me this hand, which I take&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, please, sir&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With the profoundest respect, would I have abandoned such a treasure for
+ an actress?&mdash;a Woffington! as artificial and hollow a jade as ever
+ winked at a side box!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is she, sir?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Notorious, madam. Your husband is the only man in London who does not see
+ through her. How different are you! Even I, who have no taste for
+ actresses, found myself revived, refreshed, ameliorated by that engaging
+ picture of innocence and virtue you drew this morning; yourself the bright
+ and central figure. Ah, dear angel! I remember all your favorites, and
+ envy them their place in your recollections. Your Barbary mare&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hen, sir!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course I meant hen; and Gray Gillian, his old nurse&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no, no! she is the mare, sir. He! he! he!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So she is. And Dame&mdash;Dame&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Best!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! I knew it. You see how I remember them all. And all carry me back to
+ those innocent days which fleet too soon&mdash;days when an angel like you
+ might have weaned me from the wicked pleasures of the town, to the placid
+ delights of a rural existence!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas, sir!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You sigh. It is not yet too late. I am a convert to you; I swear it on
+ this white hand. Ah! how can I relinquish it, pretty fluttering prisoner?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, please&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay a while.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No! please, sir&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;While I fetter thee with a worthy manacle.&rdquo; Sir Charles slipped a diamond
+ ring of great value upon his pretty prisoner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;La, sir, how pretty!&rdquo; cried innocence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles then undertook to prove that the luster of the ring was faint,
+ compared with that of the present wearer's eyes. This did not suit
+ innocence; she hung her head and fluttered, and showed a bashful
+ repugnance to look her admirer in the face. Sir Charles playfully
+ insisted, and Mrs. Woffington was beginning to be a little at a loss, when
+ suddenly voices were heard upon the stairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>&ldquo;My husband!&rdquo;</i> cried the false Mrs. Vane, and in a moment she rose
+ and darted into Triplet's inner apartment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Vane and Mr. Triplet were talking earnestly as they came up the stair.
+ It seems the wise Triplet had prepared a little dramatic scene for his own
+ refreshment, as well as for the ultimate benefit of all parties. He had
+ persuaded Mr. Vane to accompany him by warm, mysterious promises of a
+ happy <i>denouement;</i> and now, having conducted that gentleman as far
+ as his door, he was heard to say:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And now, sir, you shall see one who waits to forget grief, suspicion&mdash;all,
+ in your arms. Behold!&rdquo; and here he flung the door open.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The devil!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You flatter me!&rdquo; said Pomander, who had had time to recover his <i>aplomb,</i>
+ somewhat shaken, at first, by Mr. Vane's inopportune arrival.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it is to be observed that Mr. Vane had not long ago seen his wife
+ lying on her bed, to all appearance incapable of motion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Vane, before Triplet could recover his surprise, inquired of Pomander
+ why he had sent for him. &ldquo;And what,&rdquo; added he, &ldquo;is the grief, suspicion, I
+ am, according to Mr. Triplet, to forget in your arms?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Vane added this last sentence in rather a testy manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, the fact is&mdash;&rdquo; began Sir Charles, without the remotest idea of
+ what the fact was going to be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That Sir Charles Pomander&mdash;&rdquo; interrupted Triplet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But Mr. Triplet is going to explain,&rdquo; said Sir Charles, keenly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, sir; be yours the pleasing duty. But, now I think of it,&rdquo; resumed
+ Triplet, &ldquo;why not tell the simple truth? it is not a play! She I brought
+ you here to see was not Sir Charles Pomander; but&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I forbid you to complete the name!&rdquo; cried Pomander.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I command you to complete the name!&rdquo; cried Vane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gentlemen, gentlemen! how can I do both?&rdquo; remonstrated Triplet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Enough, sir!&rdquo; cried Pomander. &ldquo;It is a lady's secret. I am the guardian
+ of that lady's honor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She has chosen a strange guardian of her honor!&rdquo; said Vane bitterly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gentlemen!&rdquo; cried poor Triplet, who did not at all like the turn things
+ were taking, &ldquo;I give you my word, she does not even know of Sir Charies's
+ presence here!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who?&rdquo; cried Vane, furiously. &ldquo;Man alive! who are you speaking of?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mrs. Vane.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My wife!&rdquo; cried Vane, trembling with anger and jealousy. &ldquo;She here! and
+ with this man?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No!&rdquo; cried Triplet. &ldquo;With me, with me! Not with him, of course.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Boaster!&rdquo; cried Vane, contemptuously. &ldquo;But that is a part of your
+ profession!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pomander, irritated, scornfully drew from his pocket the ladies' joint
+ production, which had fallen at his feet from Mrs. Woffington's hand. He
+ presented this to Mr. Vane, who took it very uneasily; a mist swam before
+ his eyes as he read the words: &ldquo;Alone and unprotected&mdash;Mabel Vane.&rdquo;
+ He had no sooner read these words, than he found he loved his wife; when
+ he tampered with his treasure, he did not calculate on another seeking it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was Pomander's hour of triumph! He proceeded coolly to explain to Mr.
+ Vane, that, Mrs. Woffington having deserted him for Mr. Vane, and Mr. Vane
+ his wife for Mrs. Woffington, the bereaved parties had, according to
+ custom, agreed to console each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This soothing little speech was interrupted by Mr. Vane's sword flashing
+ suddenly out of its sheath; while that gentleman, white with rage and
+ jealousy, bade him instantly take to his guard, or be run through the body
+ like some noxious animal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles drew his sword, and, in spite of Triplet's weak interference,
+ half a dozen passes were rapidly exchanged, when suddenly the door of the
+ inner room opened, and a lady in a hood pronounced, in a voice which was
+ an excellent imitation of Mrs. Vane's, the word, &ldquo;False!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The combatants lowered their points.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You hear, sir!&rdquo; cried Triplet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You see, sir!&rdquo; said Pomander.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mabel!&mdash;wife!&rdquo; cried Mr. Vane, in agony. &ldquo;Oh, say this is not true!
+ Oh, say that letter is a forgery! Say, at least, it was by some treachery
+ you were lured to this den of iniquity! Oh, speak!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lady silently beckoned to some person inside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You know I loved you&mdash;you know how bitterly I repent the infatuation
+ that brought me to the feet of another!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lady replied not, though Vane's soul appeared to hang upon her answer.
+ But she threw the door open and there appeared another lady, the real Mrs.
+ Vane. Mrs. Woffington then threw off her hood, and, to Sir Charles
+ Pomander's consternation, revealed the features of that ingenious person,
+ who seemed born to outwit him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You heard that fervent declaration, madam?&rdquo; said she to Mrs. Vane. &ldquo;I
+ present to you, madam, a gentleman who regrets that he mistook the real
+ direction of his feelings. And to you, sir,&rdquo; continued she, with great
+ dignity, &ldquo;I present a lady who will never mistake either her feelings or
+ her duty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ernest! dear Ernest!&rdquo; cried Mrs. Vane, blushing as if she was the
+ culprit. And she came forward all love and tenderness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her truant husband kneeled at her feet of course. No! he said, rather
+ sternly, &ldquo;How came you here, Mabel?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mrs. Vane,&rdquo; said the actress, &ldquo;fancied you had mislaid that weathercock,
+ your heart, in Covent Garden, and that an actress had seen in it a fit
+ companion for her own, and had feloniously appropriated it. She came to me
+ to inquire after it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But this letter, signed by you?&rdquo; said Vane, still addressing Mabel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Was written by me on a paper which accidentally contained Mrs. Vane's
+ name. The fact is, Mr. Vane&mdash;I can hardly look you in the face&mdash;I
+ had a little wager with Sir Charles here; his diamond ring&mdash;which you
+ may see has become my diamond ring&rdquo;&mdash;a horrible wry face from Sir
+ Charles&mdash;&ldquo;against my left glove that I could bewitch a country
+ gentleman's imagination, and make him think me an angel. Unfortunately the
+ owner of his heart appeared, and, like poor Mr. Vane, took our play for
+ earnest. It became necessary to disabuse her and to open your eyes. Have I
+ done so?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have, madam,&rdquo; said Vane, wincing at each word she said. But at last,
+ by a mighty effort, he mastered himself, and, coming to Mrs. Woffington
+ with a quivering lip, he held out his hand suddenly in a very manly way.
+ &ldquo;I have been the dupe of my own vanity,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;and I thank you for
+ this lesson.&rdquo; Poor Mrs. Woffington's fortitude had well-nigh left her at
+ this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mabel,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;is this humiliation any punishment for my folly? any
+ guaranty for my repentance? Can you forgive me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is all forgiven, Ernest. But, oh, you are mistaken.&rdquo; She glided to
+ Mrs. Woffington. &ldquo;What do we not owe you, sister?&rdquo; whispered she.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing! that word pays all,&rdquo; was the reply. She then slipped her address
+ into Mrs. Vane's hand, and, courtesying to all the company, she hastily
+ left the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles Pomander followed; but he was not quick enough. She got a
+ start, and purposely avoided him, and for three days neither the public
+ nor private friends saw this poor woman's face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. and Mrs. Vane prepared to go also; but Mrs. Vane would thank good Mr.
+ Triplet and Mrs. Triplet for their kindness to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet the benevolent blushed, was confused and delighted; but suddenly,
+ turning somewhat sorrowful, he said: &ldquo;Mr. Vane, madam, made use of an
+ expression which caused a momentary pang. He called this a den of
+ iniquity. Now this is my studio! But never mind.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Vane asked his pardon for so absurd an error, and the pair left
+ Triplet in all the enjoyment which does come now and then to an honest
+ man, whether this dirty little world will or not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A coach was called and they went home to Bloomsbury. Few words were said;
+ but the repentant husband often silently pressed this angel to his bosom,
+ and the tears which found their way to her beautiful eyelashes were tears
+ of joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This weakish, and consequently villainous, though not ill-disposed person
+ would have gone down to Willoughby that night; but his wife had great good
+ sense. She would not take her husband off, like a school-boy caught out of
+ bounds. She begged him to stay while she made certain purchases; but, for
+ all that, her heart burned to be at home. So in less than a week after the
+ events we have related they left London.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime, every day Mrs. Vane paid a quiet visit to Mrs. Woffington (for
+ some days the actress admitted no other visitor), and was with her but two
+ hours before she left London. On that occasion she found her very sad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall never see you again in this world,&rdquo; said she; &ldquo;but I beg of you
+ to write to me, that my mind may be in contact with yours.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She then asked Mabel, in her half-sorrowful, half-bitter way, how many
+ months it would be ere she was forgotten.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mabel answered by quietly crying. So then they embraced; and Mabel assured
+ her friend she was not one of those who change their minds. &ldquo;It is for
+ life, dear sister; it is for life,&rdquo; cried she.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Swear this to me,&rdquo; said the other, almost sternly. &ldquo;But no. I have more
+ confidence in that candid face and pure nature than in a human being's
+ oath. If you are happy, remember you owe me something. If you are unhappy,
+ come to me, and I will love you as men cannot love.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then vows passed between them, for a singular tie bound these two women;
+ and then the actress showed a part at least of her sore heart to her new
+ sister; and that sister was surprised and grieved, and pitied her truly
+ and deeply, and they wept on each other's neck; and at last they were fain
+ to part. They parted; and true it was, they never met again in this world.
+ They parted in sorrow; but when they meet again, it shall be with joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Women are generally such faithless, unscrupulous and pitiless humbugs in
+ their dealings with their own sex&mdash;which, whatever they may say, they
+ despise at heart&mdash;that I am happy to be able to say, Mrs. Vane proved
+ true as steel. She was a noble-minded, simple-minded creature; she was
+ also a constant creature. Constancy is a rare, a beautiful, a godlike
+ virtue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Four times every year she wrote a long letter to Mrs. Woffington; and
+ twice a year, in the cold weather, she sent her a hamper of country
+ delicacies that would have victualed a small garrison. And when her sister
+ left this earthly scene&mdash;a humble, pious, long-repentant Christian&mdash;Mrs.
+ Vane wore mourning for her, and sorrowed over her; but not as those who
+ cannot hope to meet again.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ My story as a work of art&mdash;good, bad or indifferent&mdash;ends with
+ that last sentence. If a reader accompanies me further, I shall feel
+ flattered, and he does so at his own risk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My reader knows that all this befell long ago. That Woffington is gay, and
+ Triplet sad, no more. That Mabel's, and all the bright eyes of that day,
+ have long been dim, and all its cunning voices hushed. Judge then whether
+ I am one of those happy story-tellers who can end with a wedding. No! this
+ story must wind up, as yours and mine must&mdash;to-morrow&mdash;or
+ to-morrow&mdash;or to-morrow! when our little sand is run.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles Pomander lived a man of pleasure until sixty. He then became a
+ man of pain; he dragged the chain about eight years, and died miserably.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Cibber not so much died as &ldquo;slipped his wind&rdquo;&mdash;a nautical
+ expression that conveys the idea of an easy exit. He went off, quiet and
+ genteel. He was past eighty, and had lived fast. His servant called him at
+ seven in the morning. &ldquo;I will shave at eight,&rdquo; said Mr. Cibber. John
+ brought the hot water at eight; but his master had taken advantage of this
+ interval in his toilet to die!&mdash;to avoid shaving?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Snarl and Soaper conducted the criticism of their day with credit and
+ respectability until a good old age, and died placidly a natural death,
+ like twaddle, sweet or sour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Triplets, while their patroness lived, did pretty well. She got a
+ tragedy of his accepted at her theater. She made him send her a copy, and
+ with her scissors cut out about half; sometimes thinning, sometimes
+ cutting bodily away. But, lo! the inherent vanity of Mr. Triplet came out
+ strong. Submissively, but obstinately, he fought for the discarded
+ beauties. Unluckily, he did this one day that his patroness was in one of
+ her bitter humors. So she instantly gave him back his manuscript, with a
+ sweet smile owned herself inferior in judgment to him, and left him
+ unmolested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet breathed freely; a weight was taken off him. The savage steel (he
+ applied this title to the actress's scissors) had spared his <i>purpurei
+ panni.</i> He was played, pure and intact, a calamity the rest of us
+ grumbling escape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it did so happen that the audience were of the actress's mind, and
+ found the words too exuberant, and the business of the play too scanty in
+ proportion. At last their patience was so sorely tried that they supplied
+ one striking incident to a piece deficient in facts. They gave the manager
+ the usual broad hint, and in the middle of Triplet's third act a huge veil
+ of green baize descended upon &ldquo;The Jealous Spaniard.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Failing here, Mrs. Woffington contrived often to befriend him in his other
+ arts, and moreover she often sent Mr. Triplet what she called a snug
+ investment, a loan of ten pounds, to be repaid at Doomsday, with interest
+ and compound interest, according to the Scriptures; and, although she
+ laughed, she secretly believed she was to get her ten pounds back, double
+ and treble. And I believe so too.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some years later Mrs. Triplet became eventful. She fell ill, and lay a
+ dying; but one fine morning, after all hope had been given up, she
+ suddenly rose and dressed herself. She was quite well in body now, but
+ insane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She continued in this state a month, and then, by God's mercy, she
+ recovered her reason; but now the disease fell another step, and lighted
+ upon her temper&mdash;a more athletic vixen was not to be found. She had
+ spoiled Triplet for this by being too tame, so when the dispensation came
+ they sparred daily. They were now thoroughly unhappy. They were poor as
+ ever, and their benefactress was dead, and they had learned to snap. A
+ speculative tour had taken this pair to Bristol, then the second city in
+ England. They sojourned in the suburbs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One morning the postman brought a letter for Triplet, who was showing his
+ landlord's boy how to plant onions. (N. B.&mdash;Triplet had never planted
+ an onion, but he was one of your <i>a priori</i> gentlemen, and could show
+ anybody how to do anything.) Triplet held out his hand for the letter, but
+ the postman held out his hand for a half crown first. Trip's profession
+ had transpired, and his clothes inspired diffidence. Triplet appealed to
+ his good feeling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He replied with exultation, &ldquo;That he had none left.&rdquo; (A middle-aged
+ postman, no doubt.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet then suddenly started from entreaty to King Cambyses' vein. In
+ vain!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Triplet came down, and essayed the blandishments of the softer sex.
+ In vain! And, as there were no assets, the postman marched off down the
+ road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Triplet glided after him like an assassin, beckoning on Triplet, who
+ followed, doubtful of her designs. Suddenly (truth compels me to relate
+ this) she seized the obdurate official from behind, pinned both his arms
+ to his side, and with her nose furiously telegraphed her husband.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He, animated by her example, plunged upon the man and tore the letter from
+ his hand and opened it before his eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It happened to be a very windy morning, and when he opened the letter an
+ inclosure, printed on much finer paper, was caught into the air and went
+ down the wind. Triplet followed in kangaroo leaps, like a dancer making a
+ flying exit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The postman cried on all good citizens for help. Some collected and
+ laughed at him; Mrs. Triplet explaining that they were poor, and could not
+ pay half a crown for the freight of half an ounce of paper. She held him
+ convulsively until Triplet reappeared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That gentleman on his return was ostentatiously calm and dignified. &ldquo;You
+ are, or were, in perturbation about half a crown,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;There, sir,
+ is a twenty-pound note, oblige me with nineteen pounds seventeen shillings
+ and sixpence. Should your resources be unequal to such a demand, meet me
+ at the 'Green Cat and Brown Frogs,' after dinner, when you shall receive
+ your half-crown, and drink another upon the occasion of my sudden
+ accession to unbounded affluence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The postman was staggered by the sentence and overawed by the note, and
+ chose the &ldquo;Cat and Frogs,&rdquo; and liquid half-crown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet took his wife down the road and showed her the letter and
+ inclosure. The letter ran thus:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;SIR&mdash;We beg respectfully to inform you that our late friend and
+ client, James Triplet, Merchant, of the Minories, died last August,
+ without a will, and that you are his heir.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His property amounts to about twenty thousand pounds, besides some
+ reversions. Having possessed the confidence of your late uncle we should
+ feel honored and gratified if you should think us worthy to act
+ professionally for yourself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We inclose twenty pounds, and beg you will draw upon us as far as five
+ thousand pounds, should you have immediate occasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are, sir,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your humble servants,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;JAMES AND JOHN ALLMITT.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was some time before these children of misfortune could realize this
+ enormous stroke of compensation; but at last it worked its way into their
+ spirits, and they began to sing, to triumph, and dance upon the king's
+ highway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Triplet was the first to pause, and take better views. &ldquo;Oh, James!&rdquo;
+ she cried, &ldquo;we have suffered much! we have been poor, but honest, and the
+ Almighty has looked upon us at last!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then they began to reproach themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, James! I have been a peevish woman&mdash;an ill wife to you, this
+ many years!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no!&rdquo; cried Triplet, with tears in his eyes. &ldquo;It is I who have been
+ rough and brutal. Poverty tried us too hard; but we were not like the rest
+ of them&mdash;we were always faithful to the altar. And the Almighty has
+ seen us, though we often doubted it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I never doubted that, James.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So then the poor things fell on their knees upon the public road, and
+ thanked God. If any man had seen them, he would have said they were mad.
+ Yet madder things are done every day by gentlemen with faces as grave as
+ the parish bull's. And then they rose and formed their little plans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet was for devoting four-fifths to charity, and living like a prince
+ on the remainder. But Mrs. Triplet thought the poor were entitled to no
+ more than two-thirds, and they themselves ought to bask in a third, to
+ make up for what they had gone through; and then suddenly she sighed, and
+ burst into tears. &ldquo;Lucy! Lucy!&rdquo; sobbed she.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, reader, God had taken little Lucy! And her mother cried to think all
+ this wealth and comfort had come too late for her darling child.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do not cry. Lucy is richer, a thousand times, than you are, with your
+ twenty thousand pounds.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their good resolutions were carried out, for a wonder. Triplet lived for
+ years, the benefactor of all the loose fish that swim in and round
+ theaters; and, indeed, the unfortunate seldom appealed to him in vain. He
+ now predominated over the arts, instead of climbing them. In his latter
+ day he became an oracle, as far as the science of acting was concerned;
+ and, what is far more rare, he really got to know <i>something</i> about
+ it. This was owing to two circumstances: first, he ceased to run blindfold
+ in a groove behind the scenes; second, he became a frequenter of the first
+ row of the pit, and that is where the whole critic, and two-thirds of the
+ true actor, is made.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On one point, to his dying day, his feelings guided his judgment. He never
+ could see an actress equal to his Woffington. Mrs. Abington was grace
+ personified, but so was Woffington, said the old man: and Abington's voice
+ is thin, Woffington's was sweet and mellow. When Jordan rose, with her
+ voice of honey, her dewy freshness, and her heavenly laugh, that melted in
+ along with her words, like the gold in the quartz, Triplet was obliged to
+ own her the goddess of beautiful gayety; but still he had the last word:
+ &ldquo;Woffington was all <i>she</i> is, except her figure. Woffington was a
+ Hebe; your Nell Jordan is little better than a dowdy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Triplet almost reached the present century. He passed through great
+ events, but they did not excite him; his eye was upon the arts. When
+ Napoleon drew his conquering sword on England, Triplet's remark was: &ldquo;Now
+ we shall be driven upon native talent, thank Heaven!&rdquo; The storms of Europe
+ shook not Triplet. The fact is, nothing that happened on the great stage
+ of the world seemed real to him. He believed in nothing where there was no
+ curtain visible. But even the grotesque are not good in vain. Many an eye
+ was wet round his dying bed, and many a tear fell upon his grave. He made
+ his final exit in the year of grace 1799. And I, who laugh at him, would
+ leave this world to-day to be with him; for I am tossing at sea&mdash;he
+ is in port.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ A straightforward character like Mabel's becomes a firm character with
+ years. Long ere she was forty, her hand gently but steadily ruled
+ Willoughby House, and all in it. She and Mr. Vane lived very happily; he
+ gave her no fresh cause for uneasiness. Six months after their return, she
+ told him what burned in that honest heart of hers, the truth about Mrs.
+ Woffington. The water rushed to his eyes, but his heart was now wholly his
+ wife's; and gratitude to Mrs. Woffington for her noble conduct was the
+ only sentiment awakened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You must repay her, dearest,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;I know you love her, and until
+ to-day it gave me pain; now it gives me pleasure. We owe her much.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The happy, innocent life of Mabel Vane is soon summed up. Frank as the
+ day, constant as the sun, pure as the dew, she passed the golden years
+ preparing herself and others for a still brighter eternity. At home, it
+ was she who warmed and cheered the house, and the hearth, more than all
+ Christmas fires. Abroad, she shone upon the poor like the sun. She led her
+ beloved husband by the hand to Heaven. She led her children the same road;
+ and she was leading her grandchildren when the angel of death came for
+ her; and she slept in peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many remember her. For she alone, of all our tale, lived in this present
+ century; but they speak of her as &ldquo;old Madam Vane&rdquo;&mdash;her whom we knew
+ so young and fresh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She lies in Willoughby Church&mdash;her mortal part; her spirit is with
+ the spirits of our mothers and sisters, reader, that are gone before us;
+ with the tender mothers, the chaste wives, the loyal friends, and the just
+ women of all ages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RESURGET.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I come to her last, who went first; but I could not have stayed by the
+ others, when once I had laid my darling asleep. It seemed for a while as
+ if the events of our tale did her harm; but it was not so in the end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not many years afterward, she was engaged by Mr. Sheridan, at a very heavy
+ salary, and went to Dublin. Here the little girl, who had often carried a
+ pitcher on her head down to the Liffey, and had played Polly Peachum in a
+ booth, became a lion; dramatic, political and literary, and the center of
+ the wit of that wittiest of cities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Dublin ladies and she did not coalesce. They said she was a
+ naughty woman, and not fit for them morally. She said they had but two
+ topics, &ldquo;silks and scandal,&rdquo; and were unfit for her intellectually.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the saddest part of her history. But it is darkest just before
+ sunrise. She returned to London. Not long after, it so happened that she
+ went to a small church in the city one Sunday afternoon. The preacher was
+ such as we have often heard; but not so this poor woman, in her day of
+ sapless theology, ere John Wesley waked the snoring church. Instead of
+ sending a dry clatter of morality about their ears, or evaporating the
+ Bible in the thin generalities of the pulpit, this man drove God's truths
+ home to the hearts of men and women. In his hands the divine virtues were
+ thunderbolts, not swans' down. With good sense, plain speaking, and a
+ heart yearning for the souls of his brethren and his sisters, he stormed
+ the bosoms of many; and this afternoon, as he reasoned like Paul of
+ righteousness, temperance, and judgment to come, sinners trembled&mdash;and
+ Margaret Woffington was of those who trembled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After this day, she came ever to the narrow street where shone this house
+ of God; and still new light burst upon her heart and conscience. Here she
+ learned why she was unhappy; here she learned how alone she could be
+ happy; here she learned to know herself; and, the moment she knew herself,
+ she abhorred herself, and repented in dust and ashes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This strong and straightforward character made no attempt to reconcile two
+ things that an average Christian would have continued to reconcile. Her
+ interest fell in a moment before her new sense of right. She flung her
+ profession from her like a poisonous weed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Long before this, Mrs. Vane had begged her to leave the stage. She had
+ replied, that it was to her what wine is to weak stomachs. &ldquo;But,&rdquo; added
+ she, &ldquo;do not fear that I will ever crawl down hill, and unravel my own
+ reputation; nor will I ever do as I have seen others&mdash;stand groaning
+ at the wing, to go on giggling and come off gasping. No! the first night
+ the boards do not spring beneath my feet, and the pulse of the public beat
+ under my hand, I am gone! Next day, at rehearsal, instead of Woffington, a
+ note will come, to tell the manager that henceforth Woffington is herself&mdash;at
+ Twickenham, or Richmond, or Harrow-on-the-Hill, far from his dust, his
+ din, and his glare&mdash;quiet, till God takes her. Amid grass, and
+ flowers, and charitable deeds.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This day had not come. It was in the zenith of her charms and her fame
+ that she went home one night after a play, and never entered a theater, by
+ the front door or back door, again. She declined all leave-taking and
+ ceremony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When a publican shuts up shop and ceases to diffuse liquid poison, he
+ does not invite the world to put up the shutters; neither will I. Actors
+ overrate themselves ridiculously,&rdquo; added she; &ldquo;I am not of that importance
+ to the world, nor the world to me. I fling away a dirty old glove instead
+ of soiling my fingers filling it with more guineas, and the world loses in
+ me, what? another old glove, full of words; half of them idle, the rest
+ wicked, untrue, silly, or impure. <i>Rougissons, taisons-nous, et
+ partons.&rdquo;</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She now changed her residence, and withdrew politely from her old
+ associates, courting two classes only, the good and the poor. She had
+ always supported her mother and sister; but now charity became her system.
+ The following is characteristic:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A gentleman who had greatly admired this dashing actress met one day, in
+ the suburbs, a lady in an old black silk gown and a gray shawl, with a
+ large basket on her arm. She showed him its contents&mdash;worsted
+ stockings of prodigious thickness&mdash;which she was carrying to some of
+ her <i>proteges.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But surely that is a waste of your valuable time,&rdquo; remonstrated her
+ admirer. &ldquo;Much better buy them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, my good soul,&rdquo; replied the representative of Sir Harry Wildair, &ldquo;you
+ can't buy them. Nobody in this wretched town can knit worsted hose except
+ Woffington.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Conversions like this are open to just suspicion, and some did not fail to
+ confound her with certain great sinners, who have turned austere
+ self-deceivers when sin smiled no more. But this was mere conjecture. The
+ facts were clear, and speaking to the contrary. This woman left folly at
+ its brightest, and did not become austere. On the contrary, though she
+ laughed less, she was observed to smile far oftener than before. She was a
+ humble and penitent, but cheerful, hopeful Christian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another class of detractors took a somewhat opposite ground. They accused
+ her of bigotry for advising a young female friend against the stage as a
+ business. But let us hear herself. This is what she said to the girl:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At the bottom of my heart, I always loved and honored virtue. Yet the
+ tendencies of the stage so completely overcame my good sentiments that I
+ was for years a worthless woman. It is a situation of uncommon and
+ incessant temptation. Ask yourself, my child, whether there is nothing
+ else you can do, but this. It is, I think, our duty and our wisdom to fly
+ temptation whenever we can, as it is to resist it when we cannot escape
+ it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Was this the tone of bigotry?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Easy in fortune, penitent, but cheerful, Mrs. Woffington had now but one
+ care&mdash;to efface the memory of her former self, and to give as many
+ years to purity and piety as had gone to folly and frailty. This was not
+ to be! The Almighty did not permit, or perhaps I should say, did not
+ require this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some unpleasant symptoms had long attracted her notice, but in the bustle
+ of her profession had received little attention. She was now persuaded by
+ her own medical attendant to consult Dr. Bowdler, who had a great
+ reputation, and had been years ago an acquaintance and an admirer. He
+ visited her, he examined her by means little used in that day, and he saw
+ at once that her days were numbered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Bowdler's profession and experience had not steeled his heart as they
+ generally do and must do. He could not tell her this sad news, so he asked
+ her for pen and paper, and said, I will write a prescription to Mr.
+ &mdash;&mdash;. He then wrote, not a prescription, but a few lines,
+ begging Mr. &mdash;&mdash; to convey the cruel intelligence by degrees,
+ and with care and tenderness. &ldquo;It is all we can do for her,&rdquo; said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked so grave while writing the supposed prescription, that it
+ unluckily occurred to Mrs. Woffington to look over him. She stole archly
+ behind him, and, with a smile on her face&mdash;read her death warrant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a cruel stroke! A gasping sigh broke from her. At this Dr. Bowdler
+ looked up, and to his horror saw the sweet face he had doomed to the tomb
+ looking earnestly and anxiously at him, and very pale and grave. He was
+ shocked, and, strange to say, she, whose death-warrant he had signed, ran
+ and brought him a glass of wine, for he was quite overcome. Then she gave
+ him her hand in her own sweet way, and bade him not grieve for her, for
+ she was not afraid to die, and had long learned that &ldquo;life is a walking
+ shadow, a poor, poor player, who frets and struts his hour upon the stage,
+ and then is heard no more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But no sooner was the doctor gone than she wept bitterly. Poor soul! she
+ had set her heart upon living as many years to God as she had to the
+ world, and she had hoped to wipe out her former self.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas!&rdquo; she said to her sister, &ldquo;I have done more harm than I can ever
+ hope to good now; and my long life of folly and wickedness will be
+ remembered&mdash;will be what they call famous; my short life of
+ repentance who will know, or heed, or take to profit?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But she soon ceased to repine. She bowed to the will of Heaven, and set
+ her house in order, and awaited her summons. The tranquillity of her life
+ and her courageous spirit were unfavorable to the progress of disease, and
+ I am glad to say she was permitted to live nearly three years after this,
+ and these three years were the happiest period of her whole life. Works of
+ piety and love made the days eventful. She was at home now&mdash;she had
+ never been at home in folly and loose living. All her bitterness was gone
+ now, with its cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reader, it was with her as it is with many an autumn day; clouds darken
+ the sun, rain and wind sweep over all&mdash;till day declines. But then
+ comes one heavenly hour, when all ill things seem spent. There is no more
+ wind, no more rain. The great sun comes forth&mdash;not fiery bright
+ indeed, but full of tranquil glory, and warms the sky with ruby waves, and
+ the hearts of men with hope, as, parting with us for a little space, he
+ glides slowly and peacefully to rest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So fared it with this humble, penitent, and now happy Christian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A part of her desire was given her. She lived long enough to read a firm
+ recantation of her former self, to show the world a great repentance, and
+ to leave upon indelible record one more proof, what alone is true wisdom,
+ and where alone true joys are to be found.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She endured some physical pain, as all must who die in their prime. But
+ this never wrung a sigh from her great heart; and within she had the peace
+ of God, which passes all understanding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am not strong enough to follow her to her last hour; nor is it needed.
+ Enough that her own words came true. When the great summons came, it found
+ her full of hope, and peace, and joy; sojourning, not dwelling, upon
+ earth; far from dust and din and vice; the Bible in her hand, the Cross in
+ her heart; quiet; amid grass, and flowers, and charitable deeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;NON OMNEM MORITURAM.&rdquo; <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
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+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Peg Woffington, by Charles Reade
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Peg Woffington
+
+Author: Charles Reade
+
+Release Date: January, 2003 [Etext #3670]
+Posting Date: January 14, 2010
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PEG WOFFINGTON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by James Rusk
+
+
+
+
+
+PEG WOFFINGTON
+
+By Charles Reade
+
+
+To T. Taylor, Esq., my friend, and coadjutor in the comedy of "Masks and
+Faces," to whom the reader owes much of the best matter in this tale:
+and to the memory of Margaret Woffington, falsely _summed up_ until
+to-day, this "Dramatic Story" is inscribed by CHARLES READE.--
+
+LONDON. Dec. 15, 1852.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+ABOUT the middle of the last century, at eight o'clock in the evening,
+in a large but poor apartment, a man was slumbering on a rough couch.
+His rusty and worn suit of black was of a piece with his uncarpeted
+room, the deal table of home manufacture, and its slim unsnuffed candle.
+
+The man was Triplet, scene painter, actor and writer of sanguinary
+plays, in which what ought to be, viz., truth, plot, situation and
+dialogue, were not; and what ought not to be, were--_scilicet,_ small
+talk, big talk, fops, ruffians, and ghosts.
+
+His three mediocrities fell so short of one talent that he was sometimes
+_impransus._
+
+He slumbered, but uneasily; the dramatic author was uppermost, and his
+"Demon of the Hayloft" hung upon the thread of popular favor.
+
+On his uneasy slumber entered from the theater Mrs. Triplet.
+
+She was a lady who in one respect fell behind her husband; she lacked
+his variety in ill-doing, but she recovered herself by doing her one
+thing a shade worse than he did any of his three. She was what is called
+in grim sport an actress; she had just cast her mite of discredit on
+royalty by playing the Queen, and had trundled home the moment the
+breath was out of her royal body. She came in rotatory with fatigue,
+and fell, gristle, into a chair; she wrenched from her brow a diadem and
+eyed it with contempt, took from her pocket a sausage, and contemplated
+it with respect and affection, placed it in a frying-pan on the fire,
+and entered her bedroom, meaning to don a loose wrapper, and dethrone
+herself into comfort.
+
+But the poor woman was shot walking by Morpheus, and subsided
+altogether; for dramatic performances, amusing and exciting to youth
+seated in the pit, convey a certain weariness to those bright beings who
+sparkle on the stage for bread and cheese.
+
+Royalty, disposed of, still left its trail of events. The sausage began
+to "spit." The sound was hardly out of its body, when poor Triplet
+writhed like a worm on a hook. "Spitter, spittest," went the sausage.
+Triplet groaned, and at last his inarticulate murmurs became words:
+"That's right, pit now, that is so reasonable to condemn a poor fellow's
+play before you have heard it out." Then, with a change of tone, "Tom,"
+muttered he, "they are losing their respect for specters; if they do,
+hunger will make a ghost of me." Next he fancied the clown or somebody
+had got into his ghost's costume.
+
+"Dear," said the poor dreamer, "the clown makes a very pretty specter,
+with his ghastly white face, and his blood-boltered cheeks and nose. I
+never saw the fun of a clown before, no! no! no! it is not the clown, it
+is worse, much worse; oh, dear, ugh!" and Triplet rolled off the couch
+like Richard the Third. He sat a moment on the floor, with a finger
+in each eye; and then, finding he was neither daubing, ranting, nor
+deluging earth with "acts," he accused himself of indolence, and sat
+down to write a small tale of blood and bombast; he took his seat at the
+deal table with some alacrity, for he had recently made a discovery.
+
+How to write well, _rien que cela._
+
+"First, think in as homely a way as you can; next, shove your pen under
+the thought, and lift it by polysyllables to the true level of fiction,"
+(when done, find a publisher--if you can). "This," said Triplet,
+"insures common sense to your ideas, which does pretty well for a
+basis," said Triplet, apologetically, "and elegance to the dress they
+wear." Triplet, then casting his eyes round in search of such actual
+circumstances as could be incorporated on this plan with fiction, began
+to work thus:
+
+
+ TRIPLET'S FACTS. TRIPLET'S FICTION.
+
+ A farthing dip is on the table. A solitary candle cast its pale
+ gleams around.
+
+ It wants snuffing. Its elongated wick betrayed an owner
+ steeped in oblivion.
+
+
+ He jumped up, and snuffed it. He rose languidly, and trimmed it with
+ his fingers. Burned his with an
+ instrument that he had by his fingers,
+ and swore a little. side for that
+ purpose, and muttered a silent
+ ejaculation
+
+
+Before, however, the mole Triplet could undermine literature and level
+it with the dust, various interruptions and divisions broke in upon his
+design, and _sic nos servavit_ Apollo. As he wrote the last sentence, a
+loud rap came to his door. A servant in livery brought him a note from
+Mr. Vane, dated Covent Garden. Triplet's eyes sparkled, he bustled,
+wormed himself into a less rusty coat, and started off to the Theater
+Royal, Covent Garden.
+
+In those days, the artists of the pen and the brush ferreted patrons,
+instead of aiming to be indispensable to the public, the only patron
+worth a single gesture of the quill.
+
+Mr. Vane had conversed with Triplet, that is, let Triplet talk to him in
+a coffee-house, and Triplet, the most sanguine of unfortunate men, had
+already built a series of expectations upon that interview, when this
+note arrived. Leaving him on his road from Lambeth to Covent Garden, we
+must introduce more important personages.
+
+Mr. Vane was a wealthy gentleman from Shropshire, whom business had
+called to London four months ago, and now pleasure detained. Business
+still occupied the letters he sent now and then to his native county;
+but it had ceased to occupy the writer. He was a man of learning and
+taste, as times went; and his love of the Arts had taken him some time
+before our tale to the theaters, then the resort of all who pretended
+to taste; and it was thus he had become fascinated by Mrs. Woffington, a
+lady of great beauty, and a comedian high in favor with the town.
+
+The first night he saw her was an epoch in the history of this
+gentleman's mind. He had learning and refinement, and he had not great
+practical experience, and such men are most open to impression from the
+stage. He saw a being, all grace and bright nature, move like a goddess
+among the stiff puppets of the scene; her glee and her pathos were
+equally catching, she held a golden key at which all the doors of
+the heart flew open. Her face, too, was as full of goodness as
+intelligence--it was like no other farce; the heart bounded to meet it.
+
+He rented a box at her theater. He was there every night before the
+curtain drew up; and I'm sorry to say, he at last took half a dislike
+to Sunday--Sunday "which knits up the raveled sleave of care," Sunday
+"tired nature's sweet restorer," because on Sunday there was no Peg
+Woffington. At first he regarded her as a being of another sphere, an
+incarnation of poetry and art; but by degrees his secret aspirations
+became bolder. She was a woman; there were men who knew her; some of
+them inferior to him in position, and, he flattered himself, in mind.
+He had even heard a tale against her character. To him her face was its
+confutation, and he knew how loose-tongued is calumny; but still--!
+
+At last, one day he sent her a letter, unsigned. This letter expressed
+his admiration of her talent in warm but respectful terms; the writer
+told her it had become necessary to his heart to return her in some way
+his thanks for the land of enchantment to which she had introduced him.
+Soon after this, choice flowers found their way to her dressing-room
+every night, and now and then verses and precious stones mingled with
+her roses and eglantine. And oh, how he watched the great actress's
+eye all the night; how he tried to discover whether she looked oftener
+toward his box than the corresponding box on the other side of the
+house. Did she notice him, or did she not? What a point gained, if she
+was conscious of his nightly attendance. She would feel he was a friend,
+not a mere auditor. He was jealous of the pit, on whom Mrs. Woffington
+lavished her smiles without measure.
+
+At last, one day he sent her a wreath of flowers, and implored her, if
+any word he had said to her had pleased or interested her, to wear this
+wreath that night. After he had done this he trembled; he had courted a
+decision, when, perhaps, his safety lay in patience and time. She
+made her _entree;_ he turned cold as she glided into sight from the
+prompter's side; he raised his eyes slowly and fearfully from her feet
+to her head; her head was bare, wreathed only by its own rich glossy
+honors. "Fool!" thought he, "to think she would hang frivolities upon
+that glorious head for me." Yet his disappointment told him he had
+really hoped it; he would not have sat out the play but for a leaden
+incapacity of motion that seized him.
+
+The curtain drew up for the fifth act, and!--could he believe his
+eyes?--Mrs. Woffington stood upon the stage with his wreath upon her
+graceful head. She took away his breath. She spoke the epilogue, and, as
+the curtain fell, she lifted her eyes, he thought, to his box, and made
+him a distinct, queen-like courtesy; his heart fluttered to his mouth,
+and he walked home on wings and tiptoe. In short--
+
+Mrs. Woffington, as an actress, justified a portion of this enthusiasm;
+she was one of the truest artists of her day; a fine lady in her
+hands was a lady, with the genteel affectation of a gentlewoman, not a
+harlot's affectation, which is simply and without exaggeration what the
+stage commonly gives us for a fine lady; an old woman in her hands was
+a thorough woman, thoroughly old, not a cackling young person of epicene
+gender. She played Sir Harry Wildair like a man, which is how he ought
+to be played (or, which is better still, not at all), so that Garrick
+acknowledged her as a male rival, and abandoned the part he no longer
+monopolized.
+
+Now it very, very rarely happens that a woman of her age is high enough
+in art and knowledge to do these things. In players, vanity cripples art
+at every step. The young actress who is not a Woffington aims to display
+herself by means of her part, which is vanity; not to raise her part by
+sinking herself in it, which is art. It has been my misfortune to see
+----, and----, and ----, et ceteras, play the man; Nature, forgive them,
+if you can, for art never will; they never reached any idea more manly
+than a steady resolve to exhibit the points of a woman with greater
+ferocity than they could in a gown. But consider, ladies, a man is not
+the meanest of the brute creation, so how can he be an unwomanly female?
+This sort of actress aims not to give her author's creation to the
+public, but to trot out the person instead of the creation, and shows
+sots what a calf it has--and is.
+
+Vanity, vanity! all is vanity! Mesdames les Charlatanes.
+
+Margaret Woffington was of another mold; she played the ladies of high
+comedy with grace, distinction, and delicacy. But in Sir Harry Wildair
+she parted with a woman's mincing foot and tongue, and played the man
+in a style large, spirited and _elance._ As Mrs. Day (committee) she
+painted wrinkles on her lovely face so honestly that she was taken for
+threescore, and she carried out the design with voice and person, and
+did a vulgar old woman to the life. She disfigured her own beauties to
+show the beauty of her art; in a word, she was an artist! It does not
+follow she was the greatest artist that ever breathed; far from it. Mr.
+Vane was carried to this notion by passion and ignorance.
+
+On the evening of our tale he was at his post patiently sitting out one
+of those sanguinary discourses our rude forefathers thought were
+tragic plays. _Sedet aeternumque Sedebit Infelix Theseus,_ because Mrs.
+Woffington is to speak the epilogue.
+
+These epilogues were curiosities of the human mind; they whom, just to
+ourselves and _them,_ we call our _forbears,_ had an idea their blood
+and bombast were not ridiculous enough in themselves, so when the
+curtain had fallen on the _debris_ of the _dramatis personae,_ and
+of common sense, they sent on an actress to turn all the sentiment so
+laboriously acquired into a jest.
+
+To insist that nothing good or beautiful shall be carried safe from a
+play out into the street was the bigotry of English horseplay. Was a
+Lucretia the heroine of the tragedy, she was careful in the epilogue
+to speak like Messalina. Did a king's mistress come to hunger and
+repentance, she disinfected all the _petites maitresses_ in the house
+of the moral, by assuring them that sin is a joke, repentance a greater,
+and that she individually was ready for either if they would but cry,
+laugh and pay. Then the audience used to laugh, and if they did not,
+lo! the manager, actor and author of heroic tragedy were exceeding
+sorrowful.
+
+While sitting attendance on the epilogue Mr. Vane had nothing to
+distract him from the congregation but a sanguinary sermon in five
+heads, so his eyes roved over the pews, and presently he became aware of
+a familiar face watching him closely. The gentleman to whom it belonged
+finding himself recognized left his seat, and a minute later Sir Charles
+Pomander entered Mr. Vane's box.
+
+This Sir Charles Pomander was a gentleman of vice; pleasure he called
+it. Mr. Vane had made his acquaintance two years ago in Shropshire. Sir
+Charles, who husbanded everything except his soul, had turned himself
+out to grass for a month. His object was, by roast mutton, bread with
+some little flour in it, air, water, temperance, chastity and peace, to
+be enabled to take a deeper plunge into impurities of food and morals.
+
+A few nights ago, unseen by Mr. Vane, he had observed him in the
+theater; an ordinary man would have gone at once and shaken hands with
+him, but this was not an ordinary man, this was a diplomatist. First
+of all, he said to himself: "What is this man doing here?" Then he soon
+discovered this man must be in love with some actress; then it became
+his business to know who she was; this, too, soon betrayed itself. Then
+it became more than ever Sir Charles's business to know whether Mrs.
+Woffington returned the sentiment; and here his penetration was at
+fault, for the moment; he determined, however, to discover.
+
+Mr. Vane then received his friend, all unsuspicious how that friend
+had been skinning him with his eyes for some time past. After the usual
+compliments had passed between two gentlemen who had been hand and glove
+for a month and forgotten each other's existence for two years, Sir
+Charles, still keeping in view his design, said:
+
+"Let us go upon the stage." The fourth act had just concluded.
+
+"Go upon the stage!" said Mr. Vane; "what, where she--I mean among the
+actors?"
+
+"Yes; come into the green-room. There are one or two people of
+reputation there; I will introduce you to them, if you please."
+
+"Go upon the stage!" why, if it had been proposed to him to go to heaven
+he would not have been more astonished. He was too astonished at first
+to realize the full beauty of the arrangement, by means of which he
+might be within a yard of Mrs. Woffington, might feel her dress rustle
+past him, might speak to her, might drink her voice fresh from her lips
+almost before it mingled with meaner air. Silence gives consent, and Mr.
+Vane, though he thought a great deal, said nothing; so Pomander rose,
+and they left the boxes together. He led the way to the stage door,
+which was opened obsequiously to him; they then passed through a dismal
+passage, and suddenly emerged upon that scene of enchantment, the
+stage--a dirty platform encumbered on all sides with piles of scenery in
+flats. They threaded their way through rusty velvet actors and fustian
+carpenters, and entered the green-room. At the door of this magic
+chamber Vane trembled and half wished he could retire. They entered; his
+apprehension gave way to disappointment, she was not there. Collecting
+himself, he was presently introduced to a smart, jaunty, and, to do
+him justice, _distingue_ old beau. This was Colley Cibber, Esq., poet
+laureate, and retired actor and dramatist, a gentleman who is entitled
+to a word or two.
+
+This Cibber was the only actor since Shakespeare's time who had both
+acted and written well. Pope's personal resentment misleads the reader
+of English poetry as to Cibber's real place among the wits of the day.
+
+The man's talent was dramatic, not didactic, or epic, or pastoral. Pope
+was not so deep in the drama as in other matters, and Cibber was one of
+its luminaries; he wrote some of the best comedies of his day. He also
+succeeded where Dryden, for lack of true dramatic taste, failed. He
+tampered successfully with Shakespeare. Colley Cibber's version of
+"Richard the Third" is impudent and slightly larcenic, but it is
+marvelously effective. It has stood a century, and probably will stand
+forever; and the most admired passages in what literary humbugs who
+pretend they know Shakespeare by the closet, not the stage, accept as
+Shakespeare's "Richard," are Cibber's.
+
+Mr. Cibber was now in private life, a mild edition of his own
+Lord Foppington; he had none of the snob-fop as represented on our
+conventional stage; nobody ever had, and lived. He was in tolerably
+good taste; but he went ever gold-laced, highly powdered, scented, and
+diamonded, dispensing graceful bows, praises of whoever had the good
+luck to be dead, and satire of all who were here to enjoy it.
+
+Mr. Vane, to whom the drama had now become the golden branch of letters,
+looked with some awe on this veteran, for he had seen many Woffingtons.
+He fell soon upon the subject nearest his heart. He asked Mr. Cibber
+what he thought of Mrs. Woffington. The old gentleman thought well of
+the young lady's talent, especially her comedy; in tragedy, said he, she
+imitates Mademoiselle Dumenil, of the Theatre Francais, and confounds
+the stage rhetorician with the actress. The next question was not so
+fortunate. "Did you ever see so great and true an actress upon the
+whole?"
+
+Mr. Cibber opened his eyes, a slight flush came into his wash-leather
+face, and he replied: "I have not only seen many equal, many superior
+to her, but I have seen some half dozen who would have eaten her up
+and spit her out again, and not known they had done anything out of the
+way."
+
+Here Pomander soothed the veteran's dudgeon by explaining in dulcet
+tones that his friend was not long from Shropshire, and--The critic
+interrupted him, and bade him not dilute the excuse.
+
+Now Mr. Vane had as much to say as either of them, but he had not the
+habit, which dramatic folks have, of carrying his whole bank in his
+cheek-pocket, so they quenched him for two minutes.
+
+But lovers are not silenced, he soon returned to the attack; he dwelt
+on the grace, the ease, the freshness, the intelligence, the universal
+beauty of Mrs. Woffington. Pomander sneered, to draw him out. Cibber
+smiled, with good-natured superiority. This nettled the young gentleman,
+he fired up, his handsome countenance glowed, he turned Demosthenes for
+her he loved. One advantage he had over both Cibber and Pomander, a fair
+stock of classical learning; on this he now drew.
+
+"Other actors and actresses," said he, "are monotonous in voice,
+monotonous in action, but Mrs. Woffington's delivery has the compass and
+variety of nature, and her movements are free from the stale uniformity
+that distinguishes artifice from art. The others seem to me to have but
+two dreams of grace, a sort of crawling on stilts is their motion,
+and an angular stiffness their repose." He then cited the most famous
+statues of antiquity, and quoted situations in plays where, by her
+fine dramatic instinct, Mrs. Woffington, he said, threw her person into
+postures similar to these, and of equal beauty; not that she strikes
+attitudes like the rest, but she melts from one beautiful statue into
+another; and, if sculptors could gather from her immortal graces,
+painters, too, might take from her face the beauties that belong of
+right to passion and thought, and orators might revive their withered
+art, and learn from those golden lips the music of old Athens, that
+quelled tempestuous mobs, and princes drunk with victory.
+
+Much as this was, he was going to say more, ever so much more, but he
+became conscious of a singular sort of grin upon every face; this grin
+made him turn rapidly round to look for its cause. It explained itself
+at once; at his very elbow was a lady, whom his heart recognized, though
+her back was turned to him. She was dressed in a rich silk gown, pearl
+white, with flowers and sprigs embroidered; her beautiful white neck and
+arms were bare. She was sweeping up the room with the epilogue in her
+hand, learning it off by heart; at the other end of the room she turned,
+and now she shone full upon him.
+
+It certainly was a dazzling creature. She had a head of beautiful form,
+perched like a bird upon a throat massive yet shapely and smooth as a
+column of alabaster, a symmetrical brow, black eyes full of fire and
+tenderness, a delicious mouth, with a hundred varying expressions, and
+that marvelous faculty of giving beauty alike to love or scorn, a
+sneer or a smile. But she had one feature more remarkable than all, her
+eyebrows--the actor's feature; they were jet black, strongly marked,
+and in repose were arched like a rainbow; but it was their extraordinary
+flexibility which made other faces upon the stage look sleepy beside
+Margaret Woffington's. In person she was considerably above the middle
+height, and so finely formed that one could not determine the exact
+character of her figure. At one time it seemed all stateliness, at
+another time elegance personified, and flowing voluptuousness at
+another. She was Juno, Psyche, Hebe, by turns, and for aught we know at
+will.
+
+It must be confessed that a sort of halo of personal grandeur surrounds
+a great actress. A scene is set; half a dozen nobodies are there lost in
+it, because they are and seem lumps of nothing. The great artist steps
+upon that scene, and how she fills it in a moment! Mind and majesty wait
+upon her in the air; her person is lost in the greatness of her personal
+presence; she dilates with _thought,_ and a stupid giantess looks a
+dwarf beside her.
+
+No wonder then that Mr. Vane felt overpowered by this torch in a closet.
+To vary the metaphor, it seemed to him, as she swept up and down, as if
+the green-room was a shell, and this glorious creature must burst it
+and be free. Meantime, the others saw a pretty actress studying her
+business; and Cibber saw a dramatic school-girl learning what he
+presumed to be a very silly set of words. Sir C. Pomander's eye had
+been on her the moment she entered, and he watched keenly the effect of
+Vane's eloquent eulogy; but apparently the actress was too deep in her
+epilogue for anything else. She came in, saying, "Mum, mum, mum," over
+her task, and she went on doing so. The experienced Mr. Cibber, who had
+divined Vane in an instant, drew him into a corner, and complimented him
+on his well-timed eulogy.
+
+"You acted that mighty well, sir," said he. "Stop my vitals! if I did
+not think you were in earnest, till I saw the jade had slipped in among
+us. It told, sir--it told."
+
+Up fired Vane. "What do you mean, sir?" said he. "Do you suppose my
+admiration of that lady is feigned?"
+
+"No need to speak so loud, sir," replied the old gentleman; "she hears
+you. These hussies have ears like hawks."
+
+He then dispensed a private wink and a public bow; with which he
+strolled away from Mr. Vane, and walked feebly and jauntily up the
+room, whistling "Fair Hebe;" fixing his eye upon the past, and somewhat
+ostentatiously overlooking the existence of the present company.
+
+There is no great harm in an old gentleman whistling, but there are two
+ways of doing it; and as this old beau did it, it seemed not unlike a
+small cock-a-doodle-doo of general defiance; and the denizens of the
+green-room, swelled now to a considerable number by the addition of all
+the ladies and gentlemen who had been killed in the fourth act, or whom
+the buttery-fingered author could not keep in hand until the fall of
+the curtain, felt it as such; and so they were not sorry when Mrs.
+Woffington, looking up from her epilogue, cast a glance upon the old
+beau, waited for him, and walked parallel with him on the other side
+of the room, giving an absurdly exact imitation of his carriage and
+deportment. To make this more striking, she pulled out of her pocket,
+after a mock search, a huge paste ring, gazed on it with a ludicrous
+affectation of simple wonder, stuck it, like Cibber's diamond, on her
+little finger, and, pursing up her mouth, proceeded to whistle a quick
+movement,
+
+ "Which, by some devilish cantrip sleight,"
+
+played round the old beau's slow movement, without being at variance
+with it. As for the character of this ladylike performance, it was
+clear, brilliant, and loud as blacksmith.
+
+The folk laughed; Vane was shocked. "She profanes herself by whistling,"
+thought he. Mr. Cibber was confounded. He appeared to have no idea
+whence came this sparkling adagio. He looked round, placed his hands to
+his ears, and left off whistling. So did his musical accomplice.
+
+"Gentlemen," said Cibber, with pathetic gravity, "the wind howls most
+dismally this evening! I took it for a drunken shoemaker!"
+
+At this there was a roar of laughter, except from Mr. Vane. Peg
+Woffington laughed as merrily as the others, and showed a set of
+teeth that were really dazzling; but all in one moment, without the
+preliminaries an ordinary countenance requires, this laughing Venus
+pulled a face gloomy beyond conception. Down came her black brows
+straight as a line, and she cast a look of bitter reproach on all
+present; resuming her study, as who should say, "Are ye not ashamed to
+divert a poor girl from her epilogue?" And then she went on, "Mum! mum!
+mum!" casting off ever and anon resentful glances; and this made the
+fools laugh again.
+
+The Laureate was now respectfully addressed by one of his admirers,
+James Quin, the Falstaff of the day, and the rival at this time of
+Garrick in tragic characters, though the general opinion was, that he
+could not long maintain a standing against the younger genius and his
+rising school of art.
+
+Off the stage, James Quin was a character; his eccentricities were
+three--a humorist, a glutton and an honest man; traits that often caused
+astonishment and ridicule, especially the last.
+
+"May we not hope for something from Mr. Cibber's pen after so long a
+silence?"
+
+"No," was the considerate reply. "Who have ye got to play it?"
+
+"Plenty," said Quin; "there's your humble servant, there's--"
+
+"Humility at the head of the list," cried she of the epilogue. "Mum!
+mum! mum!"
+
+Vane thought this so sharp.
+
+"Garrick, Barry, Macklin, Kitty Clive here at my side, Mrs. Cibber,
+the best tragic actress I ever saw; and Woffington, who is as good a
+comedian as you ever saw, sir;" and Quin turned as red as fire.
+
+"Keep your temper, Jemmy," said Mrs. Woffington with a severe accent.
+"Mum! mum! mum!"
+
+"You misunderstand my question," replied Cibber, calmly; "I know your
+_dramatis personae_ but where the devil are your actors?"
+
+Here was a blow.
+
+"The public," said Quin, in some agitation, "would snore if we acted as
+they did in your time."
+
+"How do you know that, sir?" was the supercilious rejoinder; _"you never
+tried!"_
+
+Mr. Quin was silenced. Peg Woffington looked off her epilogue.
+
+"Bad as we are," said she coolly, "we might be worse."
+
+Mr. Cibber turned round, slightly raised his eyebrows.
+
+"Indeed!" said he. "Madam!" added he, with a courteous smile, "will you
+be kind enough to explain to me how you could be worse!"
+
+"If, like a crab, we could go backward!"
+
+At this the auditors tittered; and Mr. Cibber had recourse to his
+spy-glass.
+
+This gentleman was satirical or insolent, as the case might demand,
+in three degrees, of which the snuff-box was the comparative, and
+the spy-glass the superlative. He had learned this on the stage; in
+annihilating Quin he had just used the snuff weapon, and now he drew his
+spy-glass upon poor Peggy.
+
+"Whom have we here?" said he. Then he looked with his spy-glass to see.
+"Oh, the little Irish orange-girl!"
+
+"Whose basket outweighed Colley Cibber's salary for the first twenty
+years of his dramatic career," was the delicate reply to the above
+delicate remark. It staggered him for a moment; however, he affected
+a most puzzled air, then gradually allowed a light to steal into his
+features.
+
+"Eh! ah! oh! how stupid I am; I understand; you sold something besides
+oranges!"
+
+"Oh!" said Mr. Vane, and colored up to the temples, and cast a look on
+Cibber, as much as to say, "If you were not seventy-three!"
+
+His ejaculation was something so different from any tone any other
+person there present could have uttered that the actress's eye dwelt
+on him for a single moment, and in that moment he felt himself looked
+through and through.
+
+"I sold the young fops a bargain, you mean," was her calm reply; "and
+now I am come down to the old ones. A truce, Mr. Cibber, what do you
+understand by an actor? Tell me; for I am foolish enough to respect your
+opinion on these matters!"
+
+"An actor, young lady," said he, gravely, "is an artist who has gone
+deep enough in his art to make dunces, critics and greenhorns take it
+for nature; moreover, he really personates; which your mere _man of the
+stage_ never does. He has learned the true art of self-multiplication.
+He drops Betterton, Booth, Wilkes, or, ahem--"
+
+"Cibber," inserted Sir Charles Pomander. Cibber bowed.
+
+"In his dressing-room, and comes out young or old, a fop, a valet, a
+lover, or a hero, with voice, mien, and every gesture to match. A grain
+less than this may be good speaking, fine preaching, deep grunting, high
+ranting, eloquent reciting; but I'll be hanged if it is acting!"
+
+"Then Colley Cibber never acted," whispered Quin to Mrs. Clive.
+
+"Then Margaret Woffington is an actress," said M. W.; "the fine ladies
+take my Lady Betty for their sister. In Mrs. Day, I pass for a woman of
+seventy; and in Sir Harry Wildair I have been taken for a man. I would
+have told you that before, but I didn't know it was to my credit," said
+she, slyly, "till Mr. Cibber laid down the law."
+
+"Proof!" said Cibber.
+
+"A warm letter from one lady, diamond buckles from another, and an offer
+of her hand and fortune from a third; _rien que cela."_
+
+Mr. Cibber conveyed behind her back a look of absolute incredulity; she
+divined it.
+
+"I will not show you the letters," continued she, "because Sir Harry,
+though a rake, was a gentleman; but here are the buckles;" and she
+fished them out of her pocket, capacious of such things. The buckles
+were gravely inspected, they made more than one eye water, they were
+undeniable.
+
+"Well, let us see what we can do for her," said the Laureate. He tapped
+his box and without a moment's hesitation produced the most execrable
+distich in the language:
+
+ "Now who is like Peggy, with talent at will,
+ A maid loved her Harry, for want of a Bill?
+
+"Well, child," continued he, after the applause which follows
+extemporary verses had subsided, "take _me_ in. Play something to make
+me lose sight of saucy Peg Woffington, and I'll give the world five acts
+more before the curtain falls on Colley Cibber."
+
+"If you could be deceived," put in Mr. Vane, somewhat timidly; "I
+think there is no disguise through which grace and beauty such as Mrs.
+Woffington's would not shine, to my eyes."
+
+"That is to praise my person at the expense of my wit, sir, is it not?"
+was her reply.
+
+This was the first word she had ever addressed to him. The tones
+appeared so sweet to him that he could not find anything to reply for
+listening to them; and Cibber resumed:
+
+"Meantime, I will show you a real actress; she is coming here to-night
+to meet me. Did ever you children hear of Ann Bracegirdle?"
+
+"Bracegirdle!" said Mrs. Clive; "why, she has been dead this thirty
+years; at least I thought so."
+
+"Dead to the stage. There is more heat in her ashes than in your fire,
+Kate Clive! Ah! here comes her messenger," continued he, as an ancient
+man appeared with a letter in his hand. This letter Mrs. Woffington
+snatched and read, and at the same instant in bounced the call-boy.
+"Epilogue called," said this urchin, in the tone of command which these
+small fry of Parnassus adopt; and, obedient to his high behest, Mrs.
+Woffington moved to the door, with the Bracegirdle missive in her
+hand, but not before she had delivered its general contents: "The great
+actress will be here in a few minutes," said she, and she glided swiftly
+out of the room.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+PEOPLE whose mind or manners possess any feature, and are not as devoid
+of all eccentricity as half pounds of butter bought of metropolitan
+grocers, are recommended not to leave a roomful of their acquaintances
+until the last but one. Yes, they should always be penultimate. Perhaps
+Mrs. Woffington knew this; but epilogues are stubborn things, and
+call-boys undeniable.
+
+"Did you ever hear a woman whistle before?"
+
+"Never; but I saw one sit astride on an ass in Germany!"
+
+"The saddle was not on her husband, I hope, madam?"
+
+"No, sir; the husband walked by his kinsfolk's side, and made the best
+of a bad bargain, as Peggy's husband will have to."
+
+"Wait till some one ventures on the gay Lotharia--_illi aes triplex;_
+that means he must have triple brass, Kitty."
+
+"I deny that, sir; since his wife will always have enough for both."
+
+"I have not observed the lady's brass," said Vane, trembling with
+passion; "but I observed her talent, and I noticed that whoever attacks
+her to her face comes badly off."
+
+"Well said, sir," answered Quin; "and I wish Kitty here would tell us
+why she hates Mrs. Woffington, the best-natured woman in the theater?"
+
+"I don't hate her, I don't trouble my head about her."
+
+"Yes, you hate her; for you never miss a cut at her!"
+
+"Do you hate a haunch of venison, Quin?" said the lady.
+
+"No, you little unnatural monster," replied Quin.
+
+"For all that, you never miss a cut at one, so hold your tongue!"
+
+"Le beau raisonnement!" said Mr. Cibber. "James Quin, don't interfere
+with nature's laws; let our ladies hate one another, it eases their
+minds; try to make them Christians, and you will not convert their
+tempers, but spoil your own. Peggy there hates George Anne Bellamy,
+because she has gaudy silk dresses from Paris, by paying for them, as
+_she_ could, if not too stingy. Kitty here hates Peggy because Rich has
+breeched her, whereas Kitty, who now sets up for a prude, wanted to put
+delicacy off and small-clothes on in Peg's stead, that is where the Kate
+and Peg shoe pinches, near the femoral artery, James.
+
+"Shrimps have the souls of shrimps," resumed this _censor castigatorque
+minorum._ "Listen to me, and learn that really great actors are great in
+soul, and do not blubber like a great school-girl because Anne Bellamy
+has two yellow silk dresses from Paris, as I saw Woffington blubber
+in this room, and would not be comforted; nor fume like Kitty Clive,
+because Woffington has a pair of breeches and a little boy's rapier to
+go a playing at acting with. When I was young, two giantesses fought
+for empire upon this very stage, where now dwarfs crack and bounce like
+parched peas. They played Roxana and Statira in the 'Rival Queens.'
+Rival queens of art themselves, they put out all their strength. In the
+middle of the last act the town gave judgment in favor of Statira. What
+did Roxana? Did she spill grease on Statira's robe, as Peg Woffington
+would? or stab her, as I believe Kitty here capable of doing? No!
+Statira was never so tenderly killed as that night; she owned this to
+me. Roxana bade the theater farewell that night, and wrote to Statira
+thus: I give you word for word: 'Madam, the best judge we have has
+decided in your favor. I shall never play second on a stage where I have
+been first so long, but I shall often be a spectator, and methinks none
+will appreciate your talent more than I, who have felt its weight. My
+wardrobe, one of the best in Europe, is of no use to me; if you will
+honor me by selecting a few of my dresses, you will gratify me, and
+I shall fancy I see myself upon the stage to greater advantage than
+before.'"
+
+"And what did Statira answer, sir?" said Mr. Vane, eagerly.
+
+"She answered thus: 'Madam, the town has often been wrong, and may have
+been so last night, in supposing that I vied successfully with your
+merit; but this much is certain--and here, madam, I am the best
+judge--that off the stage you have just conquered me. I shall wear
+with pride any dress you have honored, and shall feel inspired to great
+exertions by your presence among our spectators, unless, indeed, the
+sense of your magnanimity and the recollection of your talent should
+damp me by the dread of losing any portion of your good opinion.'"
+
+"What a couple of stiff old things," said Mrs. Clive.
+
+"Nay, madam, say not so," cried Vane, warmly; "surely, this was the
+lofty courtesy of two great minds not to be overbalanced by strife,
+defeat, or victory."
+
+"What were their names, sir?"
+
+"Statira was the great Mrs. Oldfield. Roxana you will see here
+to-night."
+
+This caused a sensation.
+
+Colley's reminiscences were interrupted by loud applause from the
+theater; the present seldom gives the past a long hearing.
+
+The old war-horse cocked his ears.
+
+"It is Woffington speaking the epilogue," said Quin.
+
+"Oh, she has got the length of their foot, somehow," said a small
+actress.
+
+"And the breadth of their hands, too," said Pomander, waking from a nap.
+
+"It is the depth of their hearts she has sounded," said Vane.
+
+In those days, if a metaphor started up, the poor thing was coursed up
+hill and down dale, and torn limb from jacket; even in Parliament, a
+trope was sometimes hunted from one session into another.
+
+"You were asking me about Mrs. Oldfield, sir," resumed Cibber, rather
+peevishly. "I will own to you, I lack words to convey a just idea of
+her double and complete supremacy. But the comedians of this day are
+weak-strained _farceurs_ compared with her, and her tragic tone was
+thunder set to music.
+
+"I saw a brigadier-general cry like a child at her Indiana; I have seen
+her crying with pain herself at the wing (for she was always a great
+sufferer), I have seen her then spring upon the stage as Lady Townley,
+and in a moment sorrow brightened into joy: the air seemed to fill with
+singing-birds, that chirped the pleasures of fashion, love and youth
+in notes sparkling like diamonds and stars and prisms. She was above
+criticism, out of its scope, as is the blue sky; men went not to judge
+her, they drank her, and gazed at her, and were warmed at her, and
+refreshed by her. The fops were awed into silence, and with their
+humbler betters thanked Heaven for her, if they thanked it for anything.
+
+"In all the crowded theater, care and pain and poverty were banished
+from the memory, while Oldfield's face spoke, and her tongue flashed
+melodies; the lawyer forgot his quillets; the polemic, the mote in his
+brother's eye; the old maid, her grudge against the two sexes; the old
+man, his gray hairs and his lost hours. And can it be, that all this
+which should have been immortal, is quite--quite lost, is as though it
+had never been?" he sighed. "Can it be that its fame is now sustained by
+me; who twang with my poor lute, cracked and old, these feeble praises
+of a broken lyre:
+
+
+ 'Whose wires were golden and its heavenly air
+ More tunable than lark to shepherd's ear,
+ When wheat is green, when hawthorn buds appear.'"
+
+He paused, and his eye looked back over many years. Then, with a very
+different tone, he added:
+
+"And that Jack Falstaff there must have seen her, now I think on't."
+
+"Only once, sir," said Quin, "and I was but ten years old."
+
+"He saw her once, and he was ten years old; yet he calls Woffington
+a great comedian, and my son The's wife, with her hatchet face, the
+greatest tragedian he ever saw! Jemmy, what an ass you must be!"
+
+"Mrs. Cibber always makes me cry, and t'other always makes me laugh,"
+said Quin, stoutly, "that's why."
+
+_Ce beau raisonnement_ met no answer, but a look of sovereign contempt.
+
+A very trifling incident saved the ladies of the British stage from
+further criticism. There were two candles in this room, one on each
+side; the call-boy had entered, and, poking about for something, knocked
+down and broke one of these.
+
+"Awkward imp!" cried a velvet page.
+
+"I'll go _to the Treasury_ for another, ma'am," said the boy pertly, and
+vanished with the fractured wax.
+
+I take advantage of the interruption to open Mr. Vane's mind to the
+reader. First he had been astonished at the freedom of sarcasm these
+people indulged in without quarreling; next at the non-respect of sex.
+
+"So sex is not recognized in this community," thought he. Then the
+glibness and merit of some of their answers surprised and amused him.
+He, like me, had seldom met an imaginative repartee, except in a play or
+a book. "Society's" repartees were then, as they are now, the good
+old tree in various dresses and veils: _Tu quoque, tu mentiris, vos
+damnemini;_ but he was sick and dispirited on the whole; such very
+bright illusions had been dimmed in these few minutes.
+
+She was brilliant; but her manners, if not masculine, were very daring;
+and yet when she spoke to him, a stranger, how sweet and gentle her
+voice was! Then it was clear nothing but his ignorance could have placed
+her at the summit of her art.
+
+Still he clung to his enthusiasm for her. He drew Pomander aside. "What
+a simplicity there is in Mrs. Woffington!" said he; "the rest, male and
+female, are all so affected; she is so fresh and natural. They are all
+hot-house plants; she is a cowslip with the May dew on it."
+
+"What you take for simplicity is her refined art," replied Sir Charles.
+
+"No!" said Vane, "I never saw a more innocent creature!"
+
+Pomander laughed in his face; this laugh disconcerted him more than
+words; he spoke no more--he sat pensive. He was sorry he had come to
+this place, where everybody knew his goddess; yet nobody admired, nobody
+loved, and, alas! nobody respected her.
+
+He was roused from his reverie by a noise; the noise was caused by
+Cibber falling on Garrick, whom Pomander had maliciously quoted against
+all the tragedians of Colley Cibber's day.
+
+"I tell you," cried the veteran, "that this Garrick has banished dignity
+from the stage and given us in exchange what you and he take for fire;
+but it is smoke and vapor. His manner is little, like his person, it is
+all fuss and bustle. This is his idea of a tragic scene: A little fellow
+comes bustling in, goes bustling about, and runs bustling out." Here
+Mr. Cibber left the room, to give greater effect to his description, but
+presently returned in a mighty pother, saying: "'Give me another horse!'
+Well, where's the horse? don't you see I'm waiting for him? 'Bind up my
+wounds!' Look sharp now with these wounds. 'Have mercy, Heaven!' but
+be quick about it, for the pit can't wait for Heaven. Bustle! bustle!
+bustle!"
+
+The old dog was so irresistibly funny that the whole company were
+obliged to laugh; but in the midst of their merriment Mrs. Woffington's
+voice was heard at the door.
+
+"This way, madam."
+
+A clear and somewhat shrill voice replied: "I know the way better than
+you, child;" and a stately old lady appeared on the threshold.
+
+"Bracegirdle," said Mr. Cibber.
+
+It may well be supposed that every eye was turned on this newcomer--that
+Roxana for whom Mr. Cibber's story had prepared a peculiar interest.
+She was dressed in a rich green velvet gown with gold fringe. Cibber
+remembered it; she had played the "Eastern Queen" in it. Heaven forgive
+all concerned! It was fearfully pinched in at the waist and ribs, so as
+to give the idea of wood inside, not woman.
+
+Her hair and eyebrows were iron-gray, and she had lost a front tooth, or
+she would still have been eminently handsome. She was tall and straight
+as a dart, and her noble port betrayed none of the weakness of age, only
+it was to be seen that her hands were a little weak, and the gold-headed
+crutch struck the ground rather sharply, as if it did a little
+limbs'-duty.
+
+Such was the lady who marched into the middle of the room, with a "How
+do, Colley?" and, looking over the company's heads as if she did not see
+them, regarded the four walls with some interest. Like a cat, she seemed
+to think more of places than of folk. The page obsequiously offered her
+a chair.
+
+"Not so clean as it used to be," said Mrs. Bracegirdle.
+
+Unfortunately, in making this remark, the old lady graciously patted the
+page's head for offering her the chair; and this action gave, with some
+of the ill-constituted minds that are ever on the titter, a ridiculous
+direction to a remark intended, I believe, for the paint and wanscots,
+etc.
+
+"Nothing is as it used to be," remarked Mr. Cibber.
+
+"All the better for everything," said Mrs. Clive.
+
+"We were laughing at this mighty little David, first actor of this
+mighty little age."
+
+Now if Mr. Cibber thought to find in the newcomer an ally of the past
+in its indiscriminate attack upon the present, he was much mistaken; for
+the old actress made onslaught on this nonsense at once.
+
+"Ay, ay," said she, "and not the first time by many hundreds. 'Tis
+a disease you have. Cure yourself, Colley. Davy Garrick pleases the
+public; and in trifles like acting, that take nobody to heaven, to
+please all the world, is to be great. Some pretend to higher aims, but
+none have 'em. You may hide this from young fools, mayhap, but not from
+an old 'oman like me. He! he! he! No, no, no--not from an old 'oman like
+me."
+
+She then turned round in her chair, and with that sudden, unaccountable
+snappishness of tone to which the brisk old are subject, she snarled:
+"Gie me a pinch of snuff, some of ye, do!"
+
+Tobacco dust was instantly at her disposal. She took it with the
+points of her fingers delicately, and divested the crime of half its
+uncleanness and vulgarity--more an angel couldn't.
+
+"Monstrous sensible woman, though!" whispered Quin to Clive.
+
+"Hey, sir! what do you say, sir? for I'm a little deaf." (Not very to
+praise, it seems.)
+
+"That your judgment, madam, is equal to the reputation of your talent."
+
+The words were hardly spoken before the old lady rose upright as a
+tower. She then made an oblique preliminary sweep, and came down with
+such a courtesy as the young had never seen.
+
+James Quin, not to disgrace his generation, attempted a corresponding
+bow, for which his figure and apoplectic tendency rendered him unfit;
+and while he was transacting it, the graceful Cibber stepped gravely
+up, and looked down and up the process with his glass, like a naturalist
+inspecting some strange capriccio of an orang-outang. The gymnastics of
+courtesy ended without back-falls--Cibber lowered his tone.
+
+"You are right, Bracy. It is nonsense denying the young fellow's talent;
+but his Othello, now, Bracy! be just--his Othello!"
+
+"Oh, dear! oh, dear!" cried she; "I thought it was Desdemona's little
+black boy come in without the tea-kettle."
+
+Quin laughed uproariously.
+
+"It made me laugh a deal more than Mr. Quin's Falstaff. Oh, dear! oh,
+dear!"
+
+"Falstaff, indeed! Snuff!" In the tone of a trumpet.
+
+Quin secretly revoked his good opinion of this woman's sense.
+
+"Madam," said the page, timidly, "if you would but favor us with a
+specimen of the old style--"
+
+"Well, child, why not? Only what makes you mumble like that? but they
+all do it now, I see. Bless my soul! our words used to come out like
+brandy-cherries; but now a sentence is like raspberry-jam, on the stage
+and off."
+
+Cibber chuckled.
+
+"And why don't you men carry yourself like Cibber here?"
+
+"Don't press that question," said Colley dryly.
+
+"A monstrous poor actor, though," said the merciless old woman, in a
+mock aside to the others; "only twenty shillings a week for half his
+life;" and her shoulders went up to her ears--then she fell into a half
+reverie. "Yes, we were distinct," said she; "but I must own, children,
+we were slow. Once, in the midst of a beautiful tirade, my lover went to
+sleep, and fell against me. A mighty pretty epigram, twenty lines, was
+writ on't by one of my gallants. Have ye as many of them as we used?"
+
+"In that respect," said the page, "we are not behind our
+great-grandmothers."
+
+"I call that pert," said Mrs. Bracegirdle, with the air of one drawing
+scientific distinctions. "Now, is that a boy or a lady that spoke to me
+last?"
+
+"By its dress, I should say a boy," said Cibber, with his glass; "by its
+assurance, a lady!"
+
+"There's one clever woman among ye; Peg something, plays Lothario, Lady
+Betty Modish, and what not?"
+
+"What! admire Woffington?" screamed Mrs. Clive; "why, she is the
+greatest gabbler on the stage."
+
+"I don't care," was the reply, "there's nature about the jade. Don't
+contradict me," added she, with sudden fury; "a parcel of children."
+
+"No, madam," said Clive humbly. "Mr. Cibber, will you try and prevail on
+Mrs. Bracegirdle to favor us with a recitation?"
+
+Cibber handed his cane with pomp to a small actor. Bracegirdle did the
+same; and, striking the attitudes that had passed for heroic in their
+day, they declaimed out of the "Rival Queens" two or three tirades,
+which I graciously spare the reader of this tale. Their elocution was
+neat and silvery; but not one bit like the way people speak in streets,
+palaces, fields, roads and rooms. They had not made the grand discovery,
+which Mr. A. Wigan on the stage, and every man of sense off it, has made
+in our day and nation; namely, that the stage is a representation,
+not of stage, but of life; and that an actor ought to speak and act in
+imitation of human beings, not of speaking machines that have run and
+creaked in a stage groove, with their eyes shut upon the world at large,
+upon nature, upon truth, upon man, upon woman and upon child.
+
+"This is slow," cried Cibber; "let us show these young people how ladies
+and gentlemen moved fifty years ago, _dansons."_
+
+A fiddler was caught, a beautiful slow minuet played, and a bit of
+"solemn dancing" done. Certainly it was not gay, but it must be owned
+it was beautiful; it was the dance of kings, the poetry of the courtly
+saloon.
+
+The retired actress, however, had frisker notions left in her. "This is
+slow," cried she, and bade the fiddler play, "The wind that shakes the
+barley," an ancient jig tune; this she danced to in a style that utterly
+astounded the spectators.
+
+She showed them what fun was; her feet and her stick were all echoes to
+the mad strain; out went her heel behind, and, returning, drove her four
+yards forward. She made unaccountable slants, and cut them all over in
+turn if they did not jump for it. Roars of inextinguishable laughter
+arose, it would have made an oyster merry. Suddenly she stopped, and put
+her hands to her sides, and soon after she gave a vehement cry of pain.
+
+The laughter ceased.
+
+She gave another cry of such agony that they were all round her in a
+moment.
+
+"Oh, help me, ladies," screamed the poor woman, in tones as feminine as
+they were heart-rending and piteous. "Oh, my back! my loins! I suffer,
+gentlemen," said the poor thing, faintly.
+
+What was to be done? Mr. Vane offered his penknife to cut her laces.
+
+"You shall cut my head off sooner," cried she, with sudden energy.
+"Don't pity me," said she, sadly, "I don't deserve it;" then, lifting
+her eyes, she exclaimed, with a sad air of self-reproach: "O vanity! do
+you never leave a woman?"
+
+"Nay, madam!" whimpered the page, who was a good-hearted girl; "'twas
+your great complaisance for us, not vanity. Oh! oh! oh!" and she began
+to blubber, to make matters better.
+
+"No, my children," said the old lady, "'twas vanity. I wanted to show
+you what an old 'oman could do; and I have humiliated myself, trying
+to outshine younger folk. I am justly humiliated, as you see;" and she
+began to cry a little.
+
+"This is very painful," said Cibber.
+
+Mrs. Bracegirdle now raised her eyes (they had set her in a chair), and
+looking sweetly, tenderly and earnestly on her old companion, she said
+to him, slowly, gently, but impressively "Colley, at threescore years
+and ten this was ill done of us! You and I are here now--for what? to
+cheer the young up the hill we mounted years ago. And, old friend, if we
+detract from them we discourage them. A great sin in the old!"
+
+"Every dog his day."
+
+"We have had ours." Here she smiled, then, laying her hand tenderly
+in the old man's, she added, with calm solemnity: "And now we must go
+quietly toward our rest, and strut and fret no more the few last minutes
+of life's fleeting hour."
+
+How tame my cacotype of these words compared with what they were. I
+am ashamed of them and myself, and the human craft of writing, which,
+though commoner far, is so miserably behind the godlike art of speech:
+_"Si ipsam audivisses!"_
+
+These ink scratches, which, in the imperfection of language, we have
+called words, till the unthinking actually dream they are words, but
+which are the shadows of the corpses of words; these word-shadows then
+were living powers on her lips, and subdued, as eloquence always does,
+every heart within reach of the imperial tongue.
+
+The young loved her, and the old man, softened and vanquished, and
+mindful of his failing life, was silent, and pressed his handkerchief to
+his eyes a moment; then he said:
+
+"No, Bracy, no. Be composed, I pray you. She is right. Young people,
+forgive me that I love the dead too well, and the days when I was what
+you are now. Drat the woman," continued he, half ashamed of his emotion;
+"she makes us laugh, and makes us cry, just as she used."
+
+"What does he say, young woman?" said the old lady, dryly, to Mrs.
+Clive.
+
+"He says you make us laugh, and make us cry, madam; and so you do me,
+I'm sure."
+
+"And that's Peg Woffington's notion of an actress! Better it, Cibber and
+Bracegirdle, if you can," said the other, rising up like lightning.
+
+She then threw Colley Cibber a note, and walked coolly and rapidly out
+of the room, without looking once behind her.
+
+The rest stood transfixed, looking at one another, and at the empty
+chair. Then Cibber opened and read the note aloud. It was from Mrs.
+Bracegirdle: "Playing at tric-trac; so can't play the fool in your
+green-room to-night. B."
+
+On this, a musical ringing laugh was heard from outside the door, where
+the pseudo Bracegirdle was washing the gray from her hair, and the
+wrinkles from her face--ah! I wish I could do it as easily!--and the
+little bit of sticking-plaster from her front tooth.
+
+"Why, it is the Irish jade!" roared Cibber.
+
+"Divil a less!" rang back a rich brogue; "and it's not the furst time we
+put the comether upon ye, England, my jewal!"
+
+One more mutual glance, and then the mortal cleverness of all this began
+to dawn on their minds; and they broke forth into clapping of hands, and
+gave this accomplished _mime_ three rounds of applause; Mr. Vane and Sir
+Charles Pomander leading with, "Bravo, Woffington!"
+
+Its effect on Mr. Vane may be imagined. Who but she could have done
+this? This was as if a painter should so paint a man as to deceive his
+species. This was acting, but not like the acting of the stage. He
+was in transports, and self-satisfaction at his own judgment mingled
+pleasantly with his admiration.
+
+In this cheerful exhibition, one joined not--Mr. Cibber. His theories
+had received a shock (and we all love our theories). He himself had
+received a rap--and we don't hate ourselves.
+
+Great is the syllogism! But there is a class of arguments less
+vulnerable.
+
+If A says to B, "You can't hit me, as I prove by this syllogism" (here
+followeth the syllogism), "and B, _pour toute reponse,_ knocks A down
+such a whack that he rebounds into a sitting posture; and to him the
+man, the tree, the lamp-post and the fire-escape become not clearly
+distinguishable; this barbarous logic prevails against the logic in
+Barbara, and the syllogism is in the predicament of Humpty Dumpty. In
+this predicament was the Poet Laureate. The miscreant Proteus (could
+not) escape these chains!" So the miscreant Proteus--no bad name for an
+old actor--took his little cocked hat and marched, a smaller, if not a
+wiser man. Some disjointed words fell from him: "Mimicry is not
+acting," etc.; and with one bitter, mowing glance at the applauders,
+_circumferens acriter oculos,_ he vanished in the largest pinch of snuff
+on record. The rest dispersed more slowly.
+
+Mr. Vane waited eagerly, and watched the door for Mrs. Woffington; but
+she did not come. He then made acquaintance with good-natured Mr. Quin,
+who took him upon the stage and showed him by what vulgar appliances
+that majestic rise of the curtain he so admired was effected. Returning
+to the green-room for his friend, he found him in animated conversation
+with Mrs. Woffington. This made Vane uneasy.
+
+Sir Charles, up to the present moment of the evening, had been
+unwontedly silent, and now he was talking nineteen to the dozen, and
+Mrs. Woffington was listening with an appearance of interest that sent a
+pang to poor Vane's heart; he begged Mr. Quin to introduce him.
+
+Mr. Quin introduced him.
+
+The lady received his advances with polite composure. Mr. Vane stammered
+his admiration of her Bracegirdle; but all he could find words to say
+was mere general praise, and somewhat coldly received. Sir Charles,
+on the contrary, spoke more like a critic. "Had you given us the stage
+cackle, or any of those traditionary symptoms of old age, we should have
+instantly detected you," said he; "but this was art copying nature,
+and it may be years before such a triumph of illusion is again effected
+under so many adverse circumstances."
+
+"You are very good, Sir Charles," was the reply. "You flatter me. It was
+one of those things which look greater than they are. Nobody here knew
+Bracegirdle but Mr. Cibber; Mr. Cibber cannot see well without his
+glasses, and I got rid of one of the candles; I sent one of the imps of
+the theater to knock it down. I know Mrs. Bracegirdle by heart. I drink
+tea with her every Sunday. I had her dress on, and I gave the old boy
+her words and her way of thinking; it was mere mimicry; it was nothing
+compared with what I once did; but, a-hem!"
+
+"Pray tell us!"
+
+"I am afraid I shall shock your friend. I see he is not a wicked man
+like you, and perhaps does not know what good-for-nothing creatures
+actresses are."
+
+"He is not so ignorant as he looks," replied Sir Charles.
+
+"That is not quite the answer I expected, Sir Charles," replied this
+lively lady; "but it serves me right for fishing on dry land. Well,
+then, you must know a young gentleman courted me. I forget whether I
+liked him or not; but you will fancy I hated him, for I promised to
+marry him. You must understand, gentlemen, that I was sent into the
+world, not to act, which I abominate, but to chronicle small beer and
+teach an army of little brats their letters; so this word 'wife,' and
+that word 'chimney-corner,' took possession of my mind, and a vision of
+darning stockings for a large party, all my own, filled my heart, and
+really I felt quite grateful to the little brute that was to give me all
+this, and he would have had such a wife as men never do have, still less
+deserve. But one fine day that the theater left me time to examine his
+manner toward me, I instantly discovered he was deceiving me. So I had
+him watched, and the little brute was going to marry another woman, and
+break it to me by degrees afterward, etc. You know, Sir Charles? Ah! I
+see you do.
+
+"I found her out; got an introduction to her father; went down to his
+house three days before the marriage, with a little coalblack mustache,
+regimentals, and what not; made up, in short, with the art of my sex,
+gentlemen--and the impudence of yours.
+
+"The first day I flirted and danced with the bride. The second I
+made love to her, and at night I let her know that her intended was a
+villain. I showed her letters of his; protestations, oaths of eternal
+fidelity to one Peg Woffington, 'who will die,' drawled I,' if he
+betrays her.'
+
+"And here, gentlemen, mark the justice of Heaven. I received a
+backhanded slap: 'Peg Woffington! an actress! Oh, the villain!' cried
+she; 'let him marry the little vagabond. How dare he insult me with his
+hand that had been offered in such a quarter?'
+
+"So, in a fit of virtuous indignation, the little hypocrite dismissed
+the little brute; in other words, she had fallen in love with me.
+
+"I have not had many happy hours, but I remember it was delicious to
+look out of my window, and at the same moment smell the honeysuckles and
+see my _perfide_ dismissed under a heap of scorn and a pile of luggage
+he had brought down for his wedding tour.
+
+"I scampered up to London, laughing all the way; and when I got home, if
+I remember right, I cried for two hours. How do you account for that?"
+
+"I hope, madam," said Vane, gravely, "it was remorse for having trifled
+with that poor young lady's heart; she had never injured you."
+
+"But, sir, the husband I robbed her of was a brute and a villain in his
+little way, and wicked and good-for-nothing, etc. He would have deceived
+that poor little hypocrite, as he had this one," pointing to herself.
+
+"That is not what I mean; you inspired her with an attachment, never to
+be forgotten. Poor lady, how many sleepless nights has she passed since
+then, how many times has she strained her eyes to see her angel lover
+returning to her! She will not forget in two years the love it cost you
+but two days to inspire. The powerful should be merciful. Ah! I fear you
+have no heart."
+
+These words had no sooner burst from Mr. Vane, than he was conscious of
+the strange liberty he had taken, and, indeed, the bad taste he had been
+guilty of; and this feeling was not lessened when he saw Mrs. Woffington
+color up to the temples. Her eyes, too, glittered like basilisks; but
+she said nothing, which was remarkable in her, whose tongue was the
+sword of a _maitre d'armes._
+
+Sir Charles eyed his friend in a sly, satirical manner; he then said,
+laughingly: "In two months _she married a third!_ don't waste your
+sympathy," and turned the talk into another channel; and soon after,
+Mrs. Woffington's maid appearing at the door, she courtesied to both
+gentlemen and left the theater. Sir Charles Pomander accompanied Mr.
+Vane a little way.
+
+"What becomes of her innocence?" was his first word.
+
+"One loses sight of it in her immense talent," said the lover.
+
+"She certainly is clever in all that bears upon her business," was the
+reply; "but I noticed you were a little shocked with her indelicacy in
+telling us that story, and still more in having it to tell."
+
+"Indelicacy? No!" said Vane; "the little brute deserved it. Good
+Heavens! to think that 'a little brute' might have married that angel,
+and actually broke faith to lose her; it is incredible, the crime is
+diluted by the absurdity."
+
+"Have you heard him tell the story? No? Then take my word for it, you
+have not heard the facts of the case."
+
+"Ah! you are prejudiced against her?"
+
+"On the contrary, I like her. But I know that with all women the present
+lover is an angel and the past a demon, and so on in turn. And I know
+that if Satan were to enter the women of the stage, with the wild idea
+of impairing their veracity, he would come out of their minds a greater
+liar than he went in, and the innocent darlings would never know their
+spiritual father had been at them."
+
+Doubtful whether this sentiment and period could be improved, Sir
+Charles parted with his friend, leaving his sting in him like a friend;
+the other's reflections as he sauntered home were not strictly those of
+a wise, well-balanced mind; they ran in this style:
+
+"When she said, 'Is not that to praise my person at the expense of my
+wit?' I ought to have said, 'Nay, madam; could your wit disguise your
+person, it would betray itself, so you would still shine confessed;' and
+instead of that I said nothing!"
+
+He then ran over in his mind all the opportunities he had had
+for putting in something smart, and bitterly regretted those lost
+opportunities; and made the smart things, and beat the air with them.
+Then his cheeks tingled when he remembered that he had almost scolded
+her; and he concocted a very different speech, and straightway repeated
+it in imagination.
+
+This is lovers' pastime; I own it funny; but it is open to one
+objection, this single practice of sitting upon eggs no longer
+chickenable, carried to a habit, is capable of turning a solid intellect
+into a liquid one, and ruining a mind's career.
+
+We leave Mr. Vane, therefore, with a hope that he will not do it every
+night; and we follow his friend to the close of our chapter.
+
+Hey for a definition!
+
+What is diplomacy? Is it folly in a coat that looks like sagacity? Had
+Sir Charles Pomander, instead of watching Mr. Vane and Mrs. Woffington,
+asked the former whether he admired the latter, and whether the latter
+responded, straightforward Vane would have told him the whole truth in a
+minute. Diplomacy therefore was, as it often is, a waste of time.
+
+But diplomacy did more in this case, it _sapienter descendebat in
+fossam;_ it fell on its nose with gymnastic dexterity, as it generally
+does, upon my word.
+
+To watch Mrs. Woffington's face _vis-a-vis_ Mr. Vane, Pomander
+introduced Vane to the green-room of the Theater Royal, Covent Garden.
+By this Pomander learned nothing, because Mrs. Woffington had, with a
+wonderful appearance of openness, the closest face in Europe when she
+chose.
+
+On the other hand, by introducing this country gentleman to this
+green-room, he gave a mighty impulse and opportunity to Vane's love;
+an opportunity which he forgot the timid, inexperienced Damon might
+otherwise never have found.
+
+Here diplomacy was not policy, for, as my sagacious reader has perhaps
+divined, Sir Charles Pomander _was after her himself._
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+YES, Sir Charles was _after_ Mrs. Woffington. I use that phrase because
+it is a fine generic one, suitable to different kinds of love-making.
+
+Mr. Vane's sentiments were an inexplicable compound; but respect,
+enthusiasm, and deep admiration were the uppermost.
+
+The good Sir Charles was no enigma. He had a vacancy in his
+establishment--a very high situation, too, for those who like that sort
+of thing--the head of his table, his left hand when he drove in the
+Park, etc. To this he proposed to promote Mrs. Woffington. She was
+handsome and witty, and he liked her. But that was not what caused him
+to pursue her; slow, sagacious, inevitable as a beagle.
+
+She was celebrated, and would confer great _eclat_ on him. The scandal
+of possessing her was a burning temptation. Women admire celebrity in a
+man; but men adore it in a woman.
+
+"The world," says Philip, "is a famous man; What will not women love so
+taught?"
+
+I will try to answer this question.
+
+The women will more readily forgive disgusting physical deformity for
+Fame's sake than we. They would embrace with more rapture a famous
+orang-outang than we an illustrious chimpanzee; but when it comes to
+moral deformity the tables are turned.
+
+Had the queen pardoned Mr. Greenacre and Mrs. Manning, would the great
+rush have been on the hero, or the heroine? Why, on Mrs. Macbeth! To her
+would the blackguards have brought honorable proposals, and the gentry
+liberal ones.
+
+Greenacre would have found more female admirers than I ever shall; but
+the grand stream of sexual admiration would have set Mariaward. This
+fact is as dark as night; but it is as sure as the sun.
+
+The next day "the friends" (most laughable of human substantives!) met
+in the theater, and again visited the green-room; and this time Vane
+determined to do himself more justice. He was again disappointed; the
+actress's manner was ceremoniously polite. She was almost constantly on
+the stage, and in a hurry when off it; and, when there was a word to be
+got with her the ready, glib Sir Charles was sure to get it. Vane could
+not help thinking it hard that a man who professed no respect for her
+should thus keep the light from him; and he could hardly conceal his
+satisfaction when Pomander, at night, bade him farewell for a fortnight.
+Pressing business took Sir Charles into the country.
+
+The good Sir Charles, however, could not go without leaving his sting
+behind as a companion to his friend. He called on Mr. Vane and after a
+short preface, containing the words "our friendship," "old kindness,"
+"my greater experience," he gravely warned him against Mrs. Woffington.
+
+"Not that I would say this if you could take her for what she is, and
+amuse yourself with her as she will with you, if she thinks it worth her
+while. But I see you have a heart, and she will make a football of it,
+and torment you beyond all you have ever conceived of human anguish."
+
+Mr. Vane colored high, and was about to interrupt the speaker; but he
+continued:
+
+"There, I am in a hurry. But ask Quin, or anybody who knows her history,
+you will find she has had scores of lovers, and no one remains her
+friend after they part."
+
+"Men are such villains!"
+
+"Very likely," was the reply; "but twenty men don't ill-use one good
+woman; those are not the proportions. Adieu!"
+
+This last hit frightened Mr. Vane, he began to look into himself; he
+could not but feel that he was a mere child in this woman's hands; and,
+more than that, his conscience told him that if his heart should be made
+a football of it would be only a just and probable punishment. For there
+were particular reasons why he, of all men, had no business to look
+twice at any woman whose name was Woffington.
+
+That night he avoided the green-room, though he could not forego the
+play; but the next night he determined to stay at home altogether.
+Accordingly, at five o'clock, the astounded box-keeper wore a visage of
+dismay--there was no shilling for him! and Mr. Vane's nightly shilling
+had assumed the sanctity of salary in his mind.
+
+Mr. Vane strolled disconsolate; he strolled by the Thames, he strolled
+up and down the Strand; and, finally, having often admired the wisdom
+of moths in their gradual approach to what is not good for them, he
+strolled into the green-room, Covent Garden, and sat down. When there
+he did not feel happy. Besides, she had always been cold to him, and had
+given no sign of desiring his acquaintance, still less of recognition.
+
+Mr. Vane had often seen a weathercock at work, and he had heard a woman
+compared to it; but he had never realized the simplicity, beauty and
+justice of the simile. He was therefore surprised, as well as thrilled,
+when Mrs. Woffington, so cool, ceremonious and distant hitherto, walked
+up to him in the green-room with a face quite wreathed in smiles, and,
+without preliminary, thanked him for all the beautiful flowers he had
+sent her.
+
+"What, Mrs. Woffington--what, you recognize me?"
+
+"Of course, and have been foolish enough to feel quite supported by the
+thought I had at least one friend in the house. But," said she, looking
+down, "now you must not be angry; here are some stones that have fallen
+somehow among the flowers. I am going to give you them back, because I
+value flowers, so I cannot have them mixed with anything else; but don't
+ask me for a flower back," added she, seeing the color mount on his
+face, "for I would not give one of them to you, or anybody."
+
+Imagine the effect of this on a romantic disposition like Mr. Vane's.
+
+He told her how glad he was that she could distinguish his features amid
+the crowd of her admirers; he confessed he had been mortified when he
+found himself, as he thought, entirely a stranger to her.
+
+She interrupted him.
+
+"Do you know your friend Sir Charles Pomander? No! I am almost sure you
+do; well, he is a man I do not like. He is deceitful, besides he is a
+wicked man. There, to be plain with you, he was watching me all that
+night, the first time you came here, and, because I saw he was watching
+me I would not know who you were, nor anything about you."
+
+"But you looked as if you had never seen me before."
+
+"Of course I did, when I had made up my mind to," said the actress,
+naively.
+
+"Sir Charles has left London for a fortnight, so, if he is the only
+obstacle, I hope you will know me every night."
+
+"Why, you sent me no flowers yesterday or to-day."
+
+"But I will to-morrow."
+
+"Then I am sure I shall know your face again; good-by. Won't you see me
+in the last act, and tell me how ill I do it?"
+
+"Oh, yes!" and he hurried to his box, and so the actress secured one
+pair of hands for her last act.
+
+He returned to the green-room, but she did not revisit that verdant
+bower. The next night, after the usual compliments, she said to him,
+looking down with a sweet, engaging air:
+
+"I sent a messenger into the country to know about that lady."
+
+"What lady?" said Vane, scarcely believing his senses.
+
+"That you were so unkind to me about."
+
+"I, unkind to you? what a brute I must be!"
+
+"My meaning is, you justly rebuked me, only you should not tell an
+actress she has no heart--that is always understood. Well, Sir Charles
+Pomander said she married a third in two months!"
+
+"And did she?"
+
+"No, it was in six weeks; that man never tells the truth; and since then
+she has married a fourth."
+
+"I am glad of it!"
+
+"So am I, since you awakened my conscience."
+
+Delicious flattery! and of all flattery the sweetest, when a sweet
+creature does flattery, not merely utters it.
+
+After this, Vane made no more struggles; he surrendered himself to the
+charming seduction, and as his advances were respectful, but ardent and
+incessant, he found himself at the end of a fortnight Mrs. Woffington's
+professed lover.
+
+They wrote letters to each other every day. On Sunday they went to
+church together in the morning, and spent the afternoon in the suburbs
+wherever grass was and dust was not.
+
+In the next fortnight, poor Vane thought he had pretty well fathomed
+this extraordinary woman's character. Plumb the Atlantic with an
+eighty-fathom line, sir!
+
+"She is religious," said he, "she loves a church much better than a
+playhouse, and she never laughs nor goes to sleep in church as I do. And
+she is breaking me of swearing--by degrees. She says that no fashion can
+justify what is profane, and that it must be vulgar as well as wicked.
+And she is frankness and simplicity itself."
+
+Another thing that charmed him was her disinterestedness. She ordered
+him to buy her a present every day, but it was never to cost above a
+shilling. If an article could be found that cost exactly tenpence (a
+favorite sum of hers), she was particularly pleased, and these shilling
+presents were received with a flush of pleasure and brightening eyes.
+But when one day he appeared with a diamond necklace, it was taken very
+coldly, he was not even thanked for it, and he was made to feel, once
+for all, that the tenpenny ones were the best investments toward her
+favor.
+
+Then he found out that she was very prudent and rather stingy; of
+Spartan simplicity in her diet, and a scorner of dress off the stage.
+To redeem this she was charitable, and her charity and her economy
+sometimes had a sore fight, during which she was peevish, poor little
+soul.
+
+One day she made him a request.
+
+"I can't bear you should think me worse than I am, and I don't want you
+to think me better than I am."
+
+Vane trembled.
+
+"But don't speak to others about me; promise, and I will promise to tell
+you my whole story, whenever you are entitled to such a confidence.
+
+"When shall I be entitled to it?"
+
+"When I am sure you love me."
+
+"Do you doubt that now?"
+
+"Yes! I think you love me, but I am not sure.
+
+"Margaret, remember I have known you much longer than you have known me.
+
+"No!"
+
+"Yes! Two months before we ever spoke I lived upon your face and voice.
+
+"That is to say you looked from your box at me upon the stage, and did
+not I look from the stage at you?"
+
+"Never! you always looked at the pit, and my heart used to sink."
+
+"On the 17th of May you first came into that box. I noticed you a
+little, the next day I noticed you a little more; I saw you fancied you
+liked me, after a while I could not have played without you."
+
+Here was delicious flattery again, and poor Vane believed every word of
+it.
+
+As for her request and her promise, she showed her wisdom in both these.
+As Sir Charles observed, it is a wonderful point gained if you allow a
+woman to tell her story her own way.
+
+How the few facts that are allowed to remain get molded and twisted out
+of ugly forms into pretty shapes by those supple, dexterous fingers!
+
+This present story cannot give the life of Mrs. Woffington, but only one
+great passage therein, as do the epic and dramatic writers; but since
+there was often great point in any sentences spoken on important
+occasions by this lady, I will just quote her defense of herself. The
+reader may be sure she did not play her weakest card; let us give her
+the benefit.
+
+One day she and Kitty Clive were at it ding-dong; the green-room was
+full of actors, male and female, but there were no strangers, and the
+ladies were saying things which the men of this generation only think;
+at last Mrs. Woffington finding herself roughly, and, as she thought,
+unjustly handled, turned upon the assembly and said: "What man did ever
+I ruin in all my life? Speak who can!"
+
+And there was a dead silence.
+
+"What woman is there here at as much as three pounds per week even, that
+hasn't ruined two at the very least?"
+
+Report says there was a dead silence again, until Mrs. Clive perked up,
+and said she had only ruined one, and that was his own fault!
+
+Mrs. Woffington declined to attach weight to this example. "Kitty Clive
+is the hook without the bait," said she; and the laugh turned, as it
+always did, against Peggy's antagonist.
+
+Thus much was speedily shown to Mr. Vane, that, whatever were Mrs.
+Woffington's intentions toward him, interest had at present nothing to
+do with them; indeed it was made clear that even were she to surrender
+her liberty to him, it would only be as a princess, forging golden
+chains for herself with her own royal hand.
+
+Another fortnight passed to the mutual satisfaction of the lovers. To
+Vane it was a dream of rapture to be near this great creature, whom
+thousands admired at such a distance; to watch over her, to take her to
+the theater in a warm shawl, to stand at the wing and receive her as she
+came radiant from her dressing-room, to watch her from her rear as
+she stood like some power about to descend on the stage, to see her
+falcon-like stoop upon the said stage, and hear the burst of applause
+that followed, as the report does the flash; to compare this with the
+spiritless crawl with which common artists went on, tame from their
+first note to their last; to take her hand when she came off, feel how
+her nerves were strung like a greyhound's after a race, and her whole
+frame in a high even glow, with the great Pythoness excitement of art.
+
+And to have the same great creature leaning her head on his shoulder,
+and listening with a charming complacency, while he purred to her of
+love and calm delights, alternate with still greater triumphs; for he
+was to turn dramatic writer, for her sake, was to write plays, a woman
+the hero, and love was to inspire him, and passion supply the want of
+pencraft. (You make me laugh, Mr. Vane!)
+
+All this was heavenly.
+
+And then with all her dash, and fire, and bravado, she was a thorough
+woman.
+
+"Margaret!"
+
+"Ernest!"
+
+"I want to ask you a question. Did you really cry because that Miss
+Bellamy had dresses from Paris?"
+
+"It does not seem very likely."
+
+"No, but tell me; did you?"
+
+"Who said I did?"
+
+"Mr. Cibber."
+
+"Old fool!"
+
+"Yes, but did you?"
+
+"Did I what?"
+
+"Cry!"
+
+"Ernest, the minx's dresses were beautiful."
+
+"No doubt. But did you cry?"
+
+"And mine were dirty; I don't care about gilt rags, but dirty dresses,
+ugh!"
+
+"Tell me, then."
+
+"Tell you what?"
+
+"Did you cry or not?"
+
+"Ah! he wants to find out whether I am a fool, and despise me."
+
+"No, I think I should love you better. For hitherto I have seen no
+weakness in you, and it makes me uncomfortable."
+
+"Be comforted! Is it not a weakness to like you!"
+
+"You are free from that weakness, or you would gratify my curiosity."
+
+"Be pleased to state, in plain, intelligible English, what you require
+of me."
+
+"I want to know, in one word, did you cry or not?"
+
+"Promise to tease me no more then, and I'll tell you."
+
+"I promise."
+
+"You won't despise me?"
+
+"Despise you! of course not."
+
+"Well, then--I don't remember!"
+
+On another occasion they were seated in the dusk, by the side of the
+canal in the Park, when a little animal began to potter about on an
+adjacent bank.
+
+Mrs. Woffington contemplated it with curiosity and delight.
+
+"Oh, you pretty creature!" said she. "Now you are a rabbit; at least, I
+think so."
+
+"No," said Vane, innocently; "that is a rat."
+
+"Ah! ah! ah!" screamed Mrs. Woffington, and pinched his arm. This
+frightened the rat, who disappeared. She burst out laughing: "There's a
+fool! The thing did not frighten me, and the name did. Depend upon it,
+it's true what they say--that off the stage, I am the greatest fool
+there is. I'll never be so absurd again. Ah! ah! ah! here it is again"
+(scream and pinch, as before). "Do take me from this horrid place, where
+monsters come from the great deep."
+
+And she flounced away, looking daggers askant at the place the rat had
+vacated in equal terror.
+
+All this was silly, but it pleases us men, and contrast is so charming!
+This same fool was brimful of talent--and cunning, too, for that matter.
+
+She played late that night, and Mr. Vane saw the same creature, who
+dared not stay where she was liable to a distant rat, spring upon the
+stage as a gay rake, and flash out her rapier, and act valor's king to
+the life, and seem ready to eat up everybody, King Fear included; and
+then, after her brilliant sally upon the public, Sir Harry Wildair came
+and stood beside Mr. Vane. Her bright skin, contrasted with her powdered
+periwig, became dazzling. She used little rouge, but that little made
+her eyes two balls of black lightning. From her high instep to
+her polished forehead, all was symmetry. Her leg would have been a
+sculptor's glory; and the curve from her waist to her knee was Hogarth's
+line itself.
+
+She stood like Mercury new lighted on a heaven-kissing hill. She placed
+her foot upon the ground, as she might put a hand upon her lover's
+shoulder. We indent it with our eleven undisguised stone.
+
+Such was Sir Harry Wildair, who stood by Mr. Vane, glittering with
+diamond buckles, gorgeous with rich satin breeches, velvet coat,
+ruffles, _pictcae vestis et auri;_ and as she bent her long eye-fringes
+down on him (he was seated), all her fiery charms gradually softened and
+quivered down to womanhood.
+
+"The first time I was here," said Vane, "my admiration of you broke out
+to Mr. Cibber; and what do you think he said?"
+
+"That you praised me, for me to hear you. Did you?"
+
+"Acquit me of such meanness."
+
+"Forgive me. It is just what I should have done, had I been courting an
+actress."
+
+"I think you have not met many ingenuous spirits, dear friend."
+
+"Not one, my child."
+
+This was a phrase she often applied to him now.
+
+"The old fellow pretended to hear what I said, too; and I am sure you
+did not--did you?"
+
+"Guess."
+
+"I guess not."
+
+"I am afraid I must plead guilty. An actress's ears are so quick to hear
+praise, to tell you the truth, I did catch a word or two, and, 'It told,
+sir--it told.'"
+
+"You alarm me! At this rate, I shall never know what you see, hear or
+think, by your face."
+
+"When you want to know anything, ask me, and I will tell you; but nobody
+else shall learn anything, nor even you, any other way."
+
+"Did you hear the feeble tribute of praise I was paying you, when you
+came in?" inquired Vane.
+
+"No. You did not say that my voice had the compass and variety of
+nature, and my movements were free and beautiful, while the others when
+in motion were stilts, and coffee-pots when in repose, did you?"
+
+"Something of the sort, I believe," cried Vane, laughing.
+
+"I melted from one fine statue into another, I restored the Antinous
+to his true sex.--Goose!--Painters might learn their art from me (in
+my dressing-room, no doubt), and orators revive at my lips the music
+of Athens, that quelled mad mobs and princes drunk with victory.--Silly
+fellow!--Praise was never so sweet to me," murmured she, inclining like
+a goddess of love toward him; and he fastened on two velvet lips, that
+did not shun the sweet attack, but gently parted with a heavenly sigh;
+while her heaving bosom and yielding frame and swimming eyes confessed
+her conqueror.
+
+That morning Mr. Vane had been dispirited, and apparently
+self-discontented; but at night he went home in a state of mental
+intoxication. His poetic enthusiasm, his love, his vanity, were all
+gratified at once. And all these, singly, have conquered Prudence and
+Virtue a million times.
+
+She had confessed to him that she was disposed to risk her happiness
+on him; she had begged him to submit to a short probation; and she had
+promised, if her confidence and esteem remained unimpaired at the close
+of that period--which was not to be an unhappy one--to take advantage of
+the summer holidays, and cross the water with him, and forget everything
+in the world with him, but love.
+
+How was it that the very next morning clouds chased one another across
+his face? Was it that men are happy but while the chase is doubtful?
+Was it the letter from Pomander announcing his return, and sneeringly
+inquiring whether he was still the dupe of Peg Woffington? or was it
+that same mysterious disquiet which attacked him periodically, and then
+gave way for a while to pleasure and her golden dreams?
+
+The next day was to be a day of delight. He was to entertain her at his
+own house; and, to do her honor, he had asked Mr. Cibber, Mr. Quin and
+other actors, critics, etc.
+
+Our friend, Sir Charles Pomander, had been guilty of two ingenuities:
+first, he had written three or four letters, full of respectful
+admiration, to Mrs. Woffington, of whom he spoke slightingly to Vane;
+second, he had made a disingenuous purchase.
+
+This purchase was Pompey, Mrs. Woffington's little black slave. It is
+a horrid fact, but Pompey did not love his mistress. He was a little
+enamored of her, as small boys are apt to be, but, on the whole, a
+sentiment of hatred slightly predominated in his little black bosom.
+
+It was not without excuse.
+
+This lady was subject to two unpleasant companions--sorrow and
+bitterness. About twice a week she would cry for two hours; and after
+this class of fit she generally went abroad, and made a round of certain
+poor or sick _proteges_ she had, and returned smiling and cheerful.
+
+But other twice a week she might be seen to sit upon her chair,
+contracted into half her size, and looking daggers at the universe in
+general, the world in particular; and on these occasions, it must be
+owned, she stayed at home, and sometimes whipped Pompey.
+
+Pompey had not the sense to reflect that he ought to have been whipped
+every day, or the _esprit de corps_ to be consoled by observing that
+this sort of thing did his mistress good. What he felt was, that his
+mistress, who did everything well, whipped him with energy and skill; it
+did not take ten seconds, but still, in that brief period, Pompey found
+himself dusted and polished off.
+
+The sacred principle of justice was as strong in Mrs. Woffington as in
+the rest of her sex; she had not one grain of it. When she was not
+in her tantrums, the mischievous imp was as sacred from check or
+remonstrance as a monkey or a lap-dog; and several female servants left
+the house on his account.
+
+But Nemesis overtook him in the way we have hinted, and it put his
+little black pipe out.
+
+The lady had taken him out of great humanity; he was fed like a
+game-cock, and dressed like a Barbaric prince; and once when he was ill
+his mistress watched him, and nursed him, and tended him with the same
+white hand that plied the obnoxious whip; and when he died, she alone
+withheld her consent from his burial, and this gave him a chance black
+boys never get, and he came to again; but still these tarnation lickings
+"stuck in him gizzard." So when Sir Charles's agent proposed to him
+certain silver coins, cheap at a little treachery, the ebony ape
+grinned till he turned half ivory, and became a spy in the house of his
+mistress.
+
+The reader will have gathered that the good Sir Charles had been
+quietly in London some hours before he announced himself as _paulo post
+futurum._
+
+Diamond cut diamond; a diplomat stole this march upon an actress, and
+took her black pawn. One for Pomander! (Gun.)
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+TRIPLET, the Cerberus of art, who had the first bark in this legend,
+and has since been out of hearing, ran from Lambeth to Covent Garden,
+on receipt of Mr. Vane's note. But ran he never so quick, he had built a
+full-sized castle in the air before he reached Bow Street.
+
+The letter hinted at an order upon his muse for amatory verse;
+delightful task, cheering prospect.
+
+Bid a man whose usual lot it is to break stones for the parish at
+tenpence the cubic yard--bid such an one play at marbles with some stone
+taws for half an hour per day, and pocket one pound one--bid a poor
+horse who has drawn those stones about, and browsed short grass by the
+wayside--bid him canter a few times round a grassy ring, and then go
+to his corn--in short, bid Rosinante change with Pegasus, and you do no
+more than Mr. Vane's letter held out to Triplet.
+
+The amatory verse of that day was not up-hill work. There was a
+beaten track on a dead level, and you followed it. You told the tender
+creature, with a world of circumlocution, that, "without joking now,"
+she was a leper, ditto a tigress, item marble. You next feigned a lucid
+interval, and to be on the point of detesting your monster, but in
+twenty more verses love became, as usual, stronger than reason, and you
+wound up your rotten yarn thus:
+
+You hugged a golden chain. You drew deeper into your wound a barbed
+shaft, like--(any wild animal will do, no one of them is such an ass,
+so you had an equal title to all). And on looking back you saw with
+horrible complacency that you had inflicted one hundred locusts, five
+feet long, upon oppressed humanity.
+
+Wont to travel over acres of canvas for a few shillings, and roods of
+paper on bare speculation, Triplet knew he could make a thousand a year
+at the above work without thinking.
+
+He came therefore to the box-keeper with his eyes glittering.
+
+"Mr. Vane?"
+
+"Just gone out with a gentleman."
+
+"I'll wait then."
+
+Now Mr. Vane, we know, was in the green-room, and went home by the
+stage-door. The last thing he thought of was poor Triplet; the rich do
+not dream how they disappoint the poor. Triplet's castle fell as many a
+predecessor had. When the lights were put out, he left the theater with
+a bitter sigh.
+
+"If this gentleman knew how many sweet children I have, and what a good,
+patient, suffering wife, sure he would not have chosen me to make a fool
+of!" said the poor fellow to himself.
+
+In Bow Street, he turned, and looked back upon the theater. How gloomy
+and grand it loomed!
+
+"Ah!" thought he, "if I could but conquer you; and why not? All history
+shows that nothing is unconquerable except perseverance. Hannibal
+conquered the Alps, and I'll conquer you," cried Triplet, firmly. "Yes,
+this visit is not lost; here I register a vow: I will force my way into
+that mountain of masonry, or perish in the attempt."
+
+Triplet's most unpremeditated thoughts and actions often savored
+ridiculously of the sublime. Then and there, gazing with folded arms
+on this fortress of Thespis, the polytechnic man organized his first
+assault. The next evening he made it.
+
+Five months previously he had sent the manager three great, large
+tragedies. He knew the aversion a theatrical manager has to read a
+manuscript play, not recommended by influential folk; an aversion which
+always has been carried to superstition. So he hit on the following
+scheme:
+
+He wrote Mr. Rich a letter; in this he told Mr. Rich that he (Triplet)
+was aware what a quantity of trash is offered every week to a manager,
+how disheartening it must be to read it at all, and how natural, after a
+while, to read none. Therefore, he (Triplet) had provided that Mr.
+Rich might economize his time, and yet not remain in ignorance of the
+dramatic treasure that lay ready to his hand.
+
+"The soul of a play," continued Triplet, "is the plot or fable. A
+gentleman of your experience can decide at once whether a plot or story
+is one to take the public!"
+
+So then he drew out, in full, the three plots. He wrote these plots in
+verse! Heaven forgive us all, he really did. There were also two margins
+left; on one, which was narrow, he jotted down the _locale_ per page of
+the most brilliant passages; on the other margin, which was as wide as
+the column of the plot, he made careful drawings of the personages in
+the principal dramatic situations; scrolls issued from their mouths,
+on which were written the words of fire that were flowing from each in
+these eruptions of the dramatic action. All was referred to pages in the
+manuscripts.
+
+"By this means, sir," resumed the latter, "you will gut my fish in
+a jiffy; permit me to recall that expression, with apologies for my
+freedom. I would say, you will, in a few minutes of your valuable
+existence, skim the cream of Triplet."
+
+This author's respect for the manager's time carried him into further
+and unusual details.
+
+"Breakfast," said he, "is a quiet meal. Let me respectfully suggest,
+that by placing one of my plots on the table, with, say, the sugar-basin
+upon it (this, again, is a mere suggestion), and the play it appertains
+to on your other side, you can readily judge my work without disturbing
+the avocations of the day, and master a play in the twinkling of a
+teacup; forgive my facetiousness. This day month, at ten of the clock, I
+shall expect," said Triplet, with sudden severity, "sir, your decision!"
+
+Then, gliding back to the courtier, he formally disowned all special
+title to the consideration he expected from Mr. Rich's well-known
+courtesy; still he begged permission to remind that gentleman that he
+had, six years ago, painted for him a large scene, illuminated by two
+great poetical incidents: a red sun, of dimensions never seen out of
+doors in this or any country; and an ocean of sand, yellower than up to
+that time had been attained in art or nature; and that once, when the
+audience, late in the evening, had suddenly demanded a popular song from
+Mr. Nokes, he (Triplet), seeing the orchestra thinned by desertion, and
+nugatory by intoxication, had started from the pit, resuscitated with
+the whole contents of his snuff-box the bass fiddle, snatched the
+leader's violin, and carried Mr. Nokes triumphantly through; that
+thunders of applause had followed, and Mr. Nokes had kindly returned
+thanks _for both;_ but that he (Triplet) had hastily retired to evade
+the manager's acknowledgments, preferring to wait an opportunity like
+the present, when both interests could be conciliated, etc.
+
+This letter he posted at its destination, to save time, and returned
+triumphant home. He had now forgiven and almost forgotten Vane; and had
+reflected that, after all, the drama was his proper walk.
+
+"My dear," said he to Mrs. Triplet, "this family is on the eve of a
+great triumph!" Then, inverting that order of the grandiloquent and the
+homely which he invented in our first chapter, he proceeded to say: "I
+have reared in a single day a new avenue by which histrionic greatness,
+hitherto obstructed, may become accessible. Wife, I think I have done
+the trick at last. Lysimachus!" added he, "let a libation be poured out
+on so smiling an occasion, and a burnt-offering rise to propitiate the
+celestial powers. Run to the 'Sun,' you dog. Three pennyworth of ale,
+and a hap'orth o' tobacco."
+
+Ere the month was out, I am sorry to say, the Triplets were reduced to
+a state of beggary. Mrs. Triplet's health had long been failing; and,
+although her duties at her little theater were light and occasional, the
+manager was obliged to discharge her, since she could not be depended
+upon.
+
+The family had not enough to eat! Think of that! They were not warm at
+night, and they felt gnawing and faintness often by day. Think of that!
+
+Fortune was unjust here. The man was laughable, and a goose; and had no
+genius either for writing, painting, or acting; but in that he resembled
+most writers, painters, and actors of his own day and ours. He was
+not beneath the average of what men call art, and it is art's
+antipodes--treadmill artifice.
+
+Other fluent ninnies shared gain, and even fame, and were called
+'penmen,' in Triplet's day. Other ranters were quietly getting rich by
+noise. Other liars and humbugs were painting out o' doors indoors, and
+eating mutton instead of thistles for drenched stinging-nettles,
+yclept trees; for block-tin clouds; for butlers' pantry seas, and
+garret-conceived lakes; for molten sugar-candy rivers; for airless
+atmosphere and sunless air; for carpet nature, and cold, dead fragments
+of an earth all soul and living glory to every cultivated eye but a
+routine painter's. Yet the man of many such mediocrities could not keep
+the pot boiling. We suspect that, to those who would rise in life,
+even strong versatility is a very doubtful good, and weak versatility
+ruination.
+
+At last, the bitter, weary month was gone, and Triplet's eye brightened
+gloriously. He donned his best suit; and, while tying his cravat,
+lectured his family. First, he complimented them upon their deportment
+in adversity; hinted that moralists, not experience, had informed him
+prosperity was far more trying to the character. Put them all solemnly
+on their guard down to Lucy, _aetat_ five, that they were _morituri_ and
+_ae,_ and must be pleased to abstain from "insolent gladness" upon his
+return.
+
+"Sweet are the uses of adversity!" continued this cheerful monitor.
+"If we had not been hard up this while, we should not come with a full
+relish to meat three times a week, which, unless I am an ass (and
+I don't see myself in that light)," said Triplet dryly, "will, I
+apprehend, be, after this day, the primary condition of our future
+existence."
+
+"James, take the picture with you," said Mrs. Triplet, in one of those
+calm, little, desponding voices that fall upon the soul so agreeably
+when one is a cock-a-hoop, and desires, with permission, so to remain.
+
+"What on earth am I to take Mrs. Woffington's portrait for?"
+
+"We have nothing in the house," said the wife, blushing.
+
+Triplet's eye glittered like a rattlesnake's.
+
+"The intimation is eccentric," said he. "Are you mad, Jane? Pray,"
+continued he, veiling his wrath in scornful words, "is it requisite,
+heroic, or judicious on the eve, or more correctly the morn, of
+affluence to deposit an unfinished work of art with a mercenary
+relation? Hang it, Jane! would you really have me pawn Mrs. Woffington
+to-day?"
+
+"James," said Jane steadily, "the manager may disappoint you, we have
+often been disappointed; so take the picture with you. They will give
+you ten shillings on it."
+
+Triplet was one of those who see things roseate, Mrs. Triplet lurid.
+
+"Madam," said the poet, "for the first time in our conjugal career, your
+commands deviate so entirely from reason that I respectfully withdraw
+that implicit obedience which has hitherto constituted my principal
+reputation. I'm hanged if I do it, Jane!"
+
+"Dear James, to oblige me!"
+
+"That alters the case; you confess it is unreasonable?"
+
+"Oh, yes! it is only to oblige me.
+
+"Enough!" said Triplet, whose tongue was often a flail that fell on
+friend, foe and self indiscriminately. "Allow it to be unreasonable, and
+I do it as a matter of course--to please you, Jane."
+
+Accordingly the good soul wrapped it in green baize; but to relieve his
+mind he was obliged to get behind his wife, and shrug his shoulders to
+Lysimachus and the eldest girl, as who should say _voila bien une femme
+votre mere a vous!_
+
+At last he was off, in high spirits. He reached Covent Garden at
+half-past ten, and there the poor fellow was sucked into our narrative
+whirlpool.
+
+We must, however, leave him for a few minutes.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+SIR CHARLES POMANDER was detained in the country much longer than he
+expected.
+
+He was rewarded by a little adventure. As he cantered up to London with
+two servants and a post-boy, all riding on horses ordered in relays
+beforehand, he came up with an antediluvian coach, stuck fast by the
+road-side. Looking into the window, with the humane design of quizzing
+the elders who should be there, he saw a young lady of surpassing
+beauty. This altered the case; Sir Charles instantly drew bridle and
+offered his services.
+
+The lady thanked him, and being an innocent country lady, she opened
+those sluices, her eyes, and two tears gently trickled down, while she
+told him how eager she was to reach London, and how mortified at this
+delay.
+
+The good Sir Charles was touched. He leaped his horse over a hedge,
+galloped to a farm-house in sight, and returned with ropes and rustics.
+These and Sir Charles's horses soon drew the coach out of some stiffish
+clay.
+
+The lady thanked him, and thanked him, and thanked him, with heightening
+color and beaming eyes, and he rode away like a hero.
+
+Before he had gone five miles he became thoughtful and
+self-dissatisfied, finally his remorse came to a head; he called to him
+the keenest of his servants, Hunsdon, and ordered him to ride back past
+the carriage, then follow and put up at the same inn, to learn who the
+lady was, and whither going; and, this knowledge gained, to ride into
+town full speed and tell his master all about it. Sir Charles then
+resumed his complacency, and cantered into London that same evening.
+
+Arrived there, he set himself in earnest to cut out his friend with Mrs.
+Woffington. He had already caused his correspondence with that lady to
+grow warm and more tender, by degrees. Keeping a copy of his last, he
+always knew where he was. Cupid's barometer rose by rule; and so he
+arrived by just gradations at an artful climax, and made her in terms of
+chivalrous affection, an offer of a house, etc., three hundred a year,
+etc., not forgetting his heart, etc. He knew that the ladies of the
+stage have an ear for flattery and an eye to the main chance.
+
+The good Sir Charles felt sure that, however she might flirt with
+Vane or others, she would not forego a position for any disinterested
+_penchant._ Still, as he was a close player, he determined to throw
+a little cold water on that flame. His plan, like everything truly
+scientific, was simple.
+
+"I'll run her down to him, and ridicule him to her," resolved this
+faithful friend and lover dear.
+
+He began with Vane. He found him just leaving his own house. After
+the usual compliments, some such dialogue as this took place between
+Telemachus and pseudo Mentor:
+
+"I trust you are not really in the power of this actress?"
+
+"You are the slave of a word," replied Vane. "Would you confound black
+and white because both are colors? She is like that sisterhood in
+nothing but a name. Even on the stage they have nothing in common. They
+are puppets--all attitude and trick; she is all ease, grace and nature."
+
+"Nature!" cried Pomander. _"Laissez-moi tranquille._ They have
+artifice--nature's libel. She has art--nature's counterfeit."
+
+"Her voice is truth told by music," cried the poetical lover; "theirs
+are jingling instruments of falsehood."
+
+"They are all instruments," said the satirist; "she is rather the best
+tuned and played."
+
+"Her face speaks in every lineament; theirs are rouged and wrinkled
+masks."
+
+"Her mask is the best made, mounted, and moved; that is all."
+
+"She is a fountain of true feeling."
+
+"No; a pipe that conveys it without spilling or holding a drop."
+
+"She is an angel of talent, sir."
+
+"She's a devil of deception."
+
+"She is a divinity to worship."
+
+"She's a woman to fight shy of. There is not a woman in London better
+known," continued Sir Charles. "She is a fair actress on the boards, and
+a great actress off them; but I can tell you how to add a new charm to
+her."
+
+"Heaven can only do that," said Vane, hastily.
+
+"Yes, you can. Make her blush. Ask her for the list of your
+predecessors."
+
+Vane winced visibly. He quickened his step, as if to get rid of this
+gadfly.
+
+"I spoke to Mr. Quin," said he, at last; "and he, who has no prejudice,
+paid her character the highest compliment."
+
+"You have paid it the highest it admits," was the reply. "You have let
+it deceive you." Sir Charles continued in a more solemn tone: "Pray be
+warned. Why is it every man of intellect loves an actress once in his
+life, and no man of sense ever did it twice?"
+
+This last hit, coming after the carte and tierce we have described,
+brought an expression of pain to Mr. Vane's face. He said abruptly:
+"Excuse me, I desire to be alone for half an hour."
+
+Machiavel bowed; and, instead of taking offense, said, in a tone full of
+feeling: "Ah! I give you pain! But you are right; think it calmly over a
+while, and you will see I advise you well."
+
+He then made for the theater, and the weakish personage he had been
+playing upon walked down to the river, almost ran, in fact. He wanted to
+be out of sight.
+
+He got behind some houses, and then his face seemed literally to break
+loose from confinement; so anxious, sad, fearful and bitter were the
+expressions that coursed each other over that handsome countenance.
+
+What is the meaning of these hot and cold fits? It is not Sir Charles
+who has the power to shake Mr. Vane so without some help from within.
+_There is something wrong about this man!_
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+MACHIAVEL entered the green-room, intending to wait for Mrs. Woffington,
+and carry out the second part of his plan.
+
+He knew that weak minds cannot make head against ridicule, and with this
+pickax he proposed to clear the way, before he came to grave, sensible,
+business love with the lady. Machiavel was a man of talent. If he has
+been a silent personage hitherto, it is merely because it was not his
+cue to talk, but listen; otherwise, he was rather a master of the art
+of speech. He could be insinuating, eloquent, sensible, or satirical, at
+will. This personage sat in the green-room. In one hand was his diamond
+snuffbox, in the other a richly laced handkerchief; his clouded cane
+reposed by his side.
+
+There was an air of success about this personage. The gentle reader,
+however conceited a dog, could not see how he was to defeat Sir Charles,
+who was tall, stout, handsome, rich, witty, self-sufficient, cool,
+majestic, courageous, and in whom were united the advantages of a hard
+head, a tough stomach, and no heart at all.
+
+This great creature sat expecting Mrs. Woffington, like Olympian Jove
+awaiting Juno. But he was mortal, after all; for suddenly the serenity
+of that adamantine countenance was disturbed; his eye dilated; his grace
+and dignity were shaken. He huddled his handkerchief into one pocket,
+his snuff-box into another, and forgot his cane. He ran to the door in
+unaffected terror.
+
+Where are all his fine airs before a real danger? Love, intrigue,
+diplomacy, were all driven from his mind; for he beheld that
+approaching, which is the greatest peril and disaster known to social
+man. He saw a bore coming into the room!
+
+In a wild thirst for novelty, Pomander had once penetrated to Goodman's
+Fields Theater; there he had unguardedly put a question to a carpenter
+behind the scene; a seedy-black poet instantly pushed the carpenter away
+(down a trap, it is thought), and answered it in seven pages, and in
+continuation was so vaguely communicative, that he drove Sir Charles
+back into the far west.
+
+Sir Charles knew him again in a moment, and at sight of him bolted. They
+met at the door. "Ah! Mr. Triplet!" said the fugitive, "enchanted--to
+wish you good-morning!" and he plunged into the hiding-places of the
+theater.
+
+"That is a very polite gentleman!" thought Triplet. He was followed
+by the call-boy, to whom he was explaining that his avocations, though
+numerous, would not prevent his paying Mr. Rich the compliment of
+waiting all day in his green-room, sooner than go without an answer
+to three important propositions, in which the town and the arts were
+concerned.
+
+"What is your name?" said the boy of business to the man of words.
+
+"Mr. Triplet," said Triplet.
+
+"Triplet? There is something for you in the hall," said the urchin, and
+went off to fetch it.
+
+"I knew it," said Triplet to himself; "they are accepted. There's a note
+in the hall to fix the reading." He then derided his own absurdity in
+having ever for a moment desponded. "Master of three arts, by each of
+which men grow fat, how was it possible he should starve all his days!"
+
+He enjoyed a natural vanity for a few moments, and then came more
+generous feelings. What sparkling eyes there would be in Lambeth to-day!
+The butcher, at sight of Mr. Rich's handwriting, would give him credit.
+Jane should have a new gown.
+
+But when his tragedies were played, and he paid! El Dorado! His children
+should be the neatest in the street. Lysimachus and Roxalana should
+learn the English language, cost what it might; sausages should be
+diurnal; and he himself would not be puffed up, fat, lazy. No! he would
+work all the harder, be affable as ever, and, above all, never swamp
+the father, husband, and honest man in the poet and the blackguard of
+sentiment.
+
+Next his reflections took a business turn.
+
+"These tragedies--the scenery? Oh, I shall have to paint it myself. The
+heroes? Well, they have nobody who will play them as I should. (This was
+true!) It will be hard work, all this; but then I shall be paid for
+it. It cannot go on this way; I must and will be paid separately for my
+branches."
+
+Just as he came to this resolution, the boy returned with a brown-paper
+parcel, addressed to Mr. James Triplet. Triplet weighed it in his hand;
+it was heavy. "How is this?" cried he. "Oh, I see," said he, "these
+are the tragedies. He sends them to me for some trifling alterations;
+managers always do." Triplet then determined to adopt these alterations,
+if judicious; for, argued he, sensibly enough: "Managers are practical
+men; and we, in the heat of composition, sometimes _(sic?)_ say more
+than is necessary, and become tedious."
+
+With that he opened the parcel, and looked for Mr. Rich's communication;
+it was not in sight. He had to look between the leaves of the
+manuscripts for it; it was not there. He shook them; it did not fall
+out. He shook them as a dog shakes a rabbit; nothing!
+
+The tragedies were returned without a word. It took him some time to
+realize the full weight of the blow; but at last he saw that the manager
+of the Theater Royal, Covent Garden, declined to take a tragedy by
+Triplet into consideration or bare examination.
+
+He turned dizzy for a moment. Something between a sigh and a cry escaped
+him, and he sank upon a covered bench that ran along the wall. His poor
+tragedies fell here and there upon the ground, and his head went down
+upon his hands, which rested on Mrs. Woffington's picture. His anguish
+was so sharp, it choked his breath; when he recovered it, his eye bent
+down upon the picture. "Ah, Jane," he groaned, "you know this villainous
+world better than I!" He placed the picture gently on the seat (that
+picture must now be turned into bread), and slowly stooped for his
+tragedies; they had fallen hither and thither; he had to crawl about for
+them; he was an emblem of all the humiliations letters endure.
+
+As he went after them on all-fours, more than one tear pattered on
+the dusty floor. Poor fellow! he was Triplet, and could not have died
+without tingeing the death-rattle with some absurdity; but, after all,
+he was a father driven to despair; a castle-builder, with his work
+rudely scattered; an artist, brutally crushed and insulted by a greater
+dunce than himself.
+
+Faint, sick, and dark, he sat a moment on the seat before he could find
+strength to go home and destroy all the hopes he had raised.
+
+While Triplet sat collapsed on the bench, fate sent into the room all
+in one moment, as if to insult his sorrow, a creature that seemed the
+goddess of gayety, impervious to a care. She swept in with a bold, free
+step, for she was rehearsing a man's part, and thundered without rant,
+but with a spirit and fire, and pace, beyond the conception of our poor
+tame actresses of 1852, these lines:
+
+"Now, by the joys Which my soul still has uncontrolled pursued, I would
+not turn aside from my least pleasure, Though all thy force were armed
+to bar my way; But, like the birds, great Nature's happy commoners,
+Rifle the sweets--"
+
+"I beg--your par--don, sir!" holding the book on a level with her eye,
+she had nearly run over "two poets instead of one."
+
+"Nay, madam," said Triplet, admiring, though sad, wretched, but polite,
+"pray continue. Happy the hearer, and still happier the author of verses
+so spoken. Ah!"
+
+"Yes," replied the lady, "if you could persuade authors what we do
+for them, when we coax good music to grow on barren words. Are you an
+author, sir?" added she, slyly.
+
+"In a small way, madam. I have here three trifles--tragedies."
+
+Mrs. Woffington looked askant at them, like a shy mare.
+
+"Ah, madam!" said Triplet, in one of his insane fits, "if I might but
+submit them to such a judgment as yours?"
+
+He laid his hand on them. It was as when a strange dog sees us go to
+take up a stone.
+
+The actress recoiled.
+
+"I am no judge of such things," cried she, hastily.
+
+Triplet bit his lip. He could have killed her. It was provoking, people
+would rather be hanged than read a manuscript. Yet what hopeless
+trash they will read in crowds, which was manuscript a day ago. _Les
+imbeciles!_
+
+"No more is the manager of this theater a judge of such things," cried
+the outraged quill-driver, bitterly.
+
+"What! has he accepted them?" said needle-tongue.
+
+"No, madam, he has had them six months, and see, madam, he has returned
+them me without a word."
+
+Triplet's lip trembled.
+
+"Patience, my good sir," was the merry reply. "Tragic authors should
+possess that, for they teach it to their audiences. Managers, sir, are
+like Eastern monarchs, inaccessible but to slaves and sultanas. Do you
+know I called upon Mr. Rich fifteen times before I could see him?"
+
+"You, madam? Impossible!"
+
+"Oh, it was years ago, and he has paid a hundred pounds for each of
+those little visits. Well, now, let me see, fifteen times; you must
+write twelve more tragedies, and then he will read _one;_ and when he
+has read it, he will favor you with his judgment upon it; and when you
+have got that, you will have what all the world knows is not worth a
+farthing. He! he! he!
+
+ 'And like the birds, gay Nature's happy commoners,
+ Rifle the sweets'--mum--mum--mum."
+
+Her high spirits made Triplet sadder. To think that one word from this
+laughing lady would secure his work a hearing, and that he dared not ask
+her. She was up in the world, he was down. She was great, he was nobody.
+He felt a sort of chill at this woman--all brains and no heart. He took
+his picture and his plays under his arms and crept sorrowfully away.
+
+The actress's eye fell on him as he went off like a fifth act. His Don
+Quixote face struck her. She had seen it before.
+
+"Sir," said she.
+
+"Madam," said Triplet, at the door.
+
+"We have met before. There, don't speak, I'll tell you who you are.
+Yours is a face that has been good to me, and I never forget them."
+
+"Me, madam!" said Triplet, taken aback. "I trust I know what is due to
+you better than to be good to you, madam," said he, in his confused way.
+
+"To be sure!" cried she, "it is Mr. Triplet, good Mr. Triplet!" And this
+vivacious dame, putting her book down, seized both Triplet's hands and
+shook them.
+
+He shook hers warmly in return out of excess of timidity, and dropped
+tragedies, and kicked at them convulsively when they were down, for fear
+they should be in her way, and his mouth opened, and his eyes glared.
+
+"Mr. Triplet," said the lady, "do you remember an Irish orange-girl you
+used to give sixpence to at Goodman's Fields, and pat her on the head
+and give her good advice, like a good old soul as you were? She took the
+sixpence."
+
+"Madam," said Trip, recovering a grain of pomp, "singular as it may
+appear, I remember the young person; she was very engaging. I trust
+no harm hath befallen her, for methought I discovered, in spite of her
+brogue, a beautiful nature in her."
+
+"Go along wid yer blarney," answered a rich brogue; "an' is it the
+comanther ye'd be putting on poor little Peggy?"
+
+"Oh! oh gracious!" gasped Triplet.
+
+"Yes," was the reply; but into that "yes" she threw a whole sentence of
+meaning. "Fine cha-ney oranges!" chanted she, to put the matter beyond
+dispute.
+
+"Am I really so honored as to have patted you on that queen-like head!"
+and he glared at it.
+
+"On the same head which now I wear," replied she, pompously. "I kept
+it for the convaynience hintirely, only there's more in it. Well, Mr.
+Triplet, you see what time has done for me; now tell me whether he has
+been as kind to you. Are you going to speak to me, Mr. Triplet?"
+
+As a decayed hunter stands lean and disconsolate, head poked forward
+like a goose's, but if hounds sweep by his paddock in full cry, followed
+by horses who are what he was not, he does, by reason of the good blood
+that is and will be in his heart, _dum spiritus hoss regit artus,_ cock
+his ears, erect his tail, and trot fiery to his extremest hedge, and
+look over it, nostril distended, mane flowing, and neigh the hunt
+onward like a trumpet; so Triplet, who had manhood at bottom, instead of
+whining out his troubles in the ear of encouraging beauty, as a sneaking
+spirit would, perked up, and resolved to put the best face upon it all
+before so charming a creature of the other sex.
+
+"Yes, madam," cried he, with the air of one who could have smacked
+his lips, "Providence has blessed me with an excellent wife and four
+charming children. My wife was Miss Chatterton; you remember her?"
+
+"Yes! Where is she playing now?"
+
+"Why, madam, her health is too weak for it."
+
+"Oh!--You were scene-painter. Do you still paint scenes?"
+
+"With the pen, madam, not the brush. As the wags said, I transferred
+the distemper from my canvas to my imagination." And Triplet laughed
+uproariously.
+
+When he had done, Mrs. Woffington, who had joined the laugh, inquired
+quietly whether his pieces had met with success.
+
+"Eminent--in the closet; the stage is to come!" and he smiled absurdly
+again.
+
+The lady smiled back.
+
+"In short," said Triplet, recapitulating, "being blessed with health,
+and more tastes in the arts than most, and a cheerful spirit, I should
+be wrong, madam, to repine; and this day, in particular, is a happy
+one," added the rose colorist, "since the great Mrs. Woffington has
+deigned to remember me, and call me friend."
+
+Such was Triplet's summary.
+
+Mrs. Woffington drew out her memorandum-book, and took down her summary
+of the crafty Triplet's facts. So easy is it for us Triplets to draw the
+wool over the eyes of women and Woffingtons.
+
+"Triplet, discharged from scene-painting; wife, no engagement; four
+children supported by his pen--that is to say, starving; lose no time!"
+
+She closed her book; and smiled, and said:
+
+"I wish these things were comedies instead of trash-edies, as the French
+call them; we would cut one in half, and slice away the finest passages,
+and then I would act in it; and you would see how the stage-door would
+fly open at sight of the author."
+
+"O Heaven!" said poor Trip, excited by this picture. "I'll go home, and
+write a comedy this moment."
+
+"Stay!" said she; "you had better leave the tragedies with me."
+
+"My dear madam! You will read them?"
+
+"Ahem! I will make poor Rich read them."
+
+"But, madam, he has rejected them."
+
+"That is the first step. Reading them comes after, when it comes at all.
+What have you got in that green baize?"
+
+"In this green baize?"
+
+"Well, in this green baize, then."
+
+"Oh madam! nothing--nothing! To tell the truth, it is an adventurous
+attempt from memory. I saw you play Silvia, madam; I was so charmed,
+that I came every night. I took your face home with me--forgive my
+presumption, madam--and I produced this faint adumbration, which I
+expose with diffidence."
+
+So then he took the green baize off.
+
+The color rushed into her face; she was evidently gratified. Poor, silly
+Mrs. Triplet was doomed to be right about this portrait.
+
+"I will give you a sitting," said she. "You will find painting dull
+faces a better trade than writing dull tragedies. Work for other
+people's vanity, not your own; that is the art of art. And now I want
+Mr. Triplet's address."
+
+"On the fly-leaf of each work, madam," replied that florid author, "and
+also at the foot of every page which contains a particularly brilliant
+passage, I have been careful to insert the address of James Triplet,
+painter, actor, and dramatist, and Mrs. Woffington's humble, devoted
+servant." He bowed ridiculously low, and moved toward the door; but
+something gushed across his heart, and he returned with long strides to
+her. "Madam!" cried he, with a jaunty manner, "you have inspired a son
+of Thespis with dreams of eloquence, you have tuned in a higher key a
+poet's lyre, you have tinged a painter's existence with brighter colors,
+and--and--" His mouth worked still, but no more artificial words would
+come. He sobbed out, "and God in heaven bless you, Mrs. Woffington!" and
+ran out of the room.
+
+Mrs. Woffington looked after him with interest, for this confirmed her
+suspicions; but suddenly her expression changed, she wore a look we have
+not yet seen upon her--it was a half-cunning, half-spiteful look; it was
+suppressed in a moment, she gave herself to her book, and presently Sir
+Charles Pomander sauntered into the room.
+
+"Ah! what, Mrs. Woffington here?" said the diplomat.
+
+"Sir Charles Pomander, I declare!" said the actress.
+
+"I have just parted with an admirer of yours.
+
+"I wish I could part with them all," was the reply.
+
+"A pastoral youth, who means to win La Woffington by agricultural
+courtship--as shepherds woo in sylvan shades."
+
+"With oaten pipe the rustic maids," quoth the Woffington, improvising.
+
+The diplomat laughed, the actress laughed, and said, laughingly: _"Tell
+me what he says word for word?"_
+
+"It will only make you laugh."
+
+"Well, and am I never to laugh, who provide so many laughs for you all?"
+
+_"C'est juste._ You shall share the general merriment. Imagine a
+romantic soul, who adores you for _your simplicity!"_
+
+"My simplicity! Am I so very simple?"
+
+"No," said Sir Charles, monstrous dryly. "He says you are out of place
+on the stage, and wants to take the star from its firmament, and put it
+in a cottage."
+
+"I am not a star," replied the Woffington, "I am only a meteor. And what
+does the man think I am to do without this (here she imitated applause)
+from my dear public's thousand hands?"
+
+"You are to have this" (he mimicked a kiss) "from a single mouth,
+instead."
+
+"He is mad! Tell me what more he says. Oh, don't stop to invent; I
+should detect you; and you would only spoil this man."
+
+He laughed conceitedly. "I should spoil him! Well, then, he proposes to
+be your friend rather than your lover, and keep you from being talked
+of, he! he! instead of adding to your _eclat."_
+
+"And if he is your friend, why don't you tell him my real character, and
+send him into the country?"
+
+She said this rapidly and with an appearance of earnest. The diplomatist
+fell into the trap.
+
+"I do," said he; "but he snaps his fingers at me and common sense and
+the world. I really think there is only one way to get rid of him, and
+with him of every annoyance."
+
+"Ah! that would be nice."
+
+"Delicious! I had the honor, madam, of laying certain proposals at your
+feet."
+
+"Oh! yes--your letter, Sir Charles. I have only just had time to run my
+eye down it. Let us examine it together."
+
+She took out the letter with a wonderful appearance of interest, and the
+diplomat allowed himself to fall into the absurd position to which she
+invited him. They put their two heads together over the letter.
+
+"'A coach, a country-house, pin-money'--and I'm so tired of houses and
+coaches and pins. Oh! yes, here's something; what is this you offer me,
+up in this corner?"
+
+Sir Charles inspected the place carefully, and announced that it was
+"his heart."
+
+"And he can't even write it!" said she. "That word is 'earth.' Ah! well,
+you know best. There is your letter, Sir Charles."
+
+She courtesied, returned him the letter, and resumed her study of
+Lothario.
+
+"Favor me with your answer, madam," said her suitor.
+
+"You have it," was the reply.
+
+"Madam, I don't understand your answer," said Sir Charles, stiffly.
+
+"I can't find you answers and understandings, too," was the lady-like
+reply. "You must beat my answer into your understanding while I beat
+this man's verse into mine.
+
+ 'And like the birds, etc.'"
+
+Pomander recovered himself a little; he laughed with quiet insolence.
+"Tell me," said he, "do you really refuse?"
+
+"My good soul," said Mrs. Woffington, "why this surprise! Are you so
+ignorant of the stage and the world as not to know that I refuse such
+offers as yours every week of my life?"
+
+"I know better," was the cool reply. She left it unnoticed.
+
+"I have so many of these," continued she, "that I have begun to forget
+they are insults."
+
+At this word the button broke off Sir Charles's foil.
+
+"Insults, madam! They are the highest compliments you have left it in
+our power to pay you."
+
+The other took the button off her foil.
+
+"Indeed!" cried she, with well-feigned surprise. "Oh! I understand.
+To be your mistress could be but a temporary disgrace; to be your wife
+would be a lasting discredit," she continued. "And now, sir, having
+played your rival's game, and showed me your whole hand" (a light broke
+in upon our diplomat), "do something to recover the reputation of a man
+of the world. A gentleman is somewhere about in whom you have interested
+me by your lame satire; pray tell him I am in the green-room, with no
+better companion than this bad poet."
+
+Sir Charles clinched his teeth.
+
+"I accept the delicate commission," replied he, "that you may see how
+easily the man of the world drops what the rustic is eager to pick up."
+
+"That is better," said the actress, with a provoking appearance of
+good-humor. "You have a woman's tongue, if not her wit; but, my good
+soul," added she, with cool _hauteur,_ "remember you have something to
+do of more importance than anything you can say."
+
+"I accept your courteous dismissal, madam," said Pomander, grinding his
+teeth. "I will send a carpenter for your swain. And I leave you."
+
+He bowed to the ground.
+
+"Thanks for the double favor, good Sir Charles."
+
+She courtesied to the floor.
+
+Feminine vengeance! He had come between her and her love. All very
+clever, Mrs. Actress; but was it wise?
+
+"I am revenged," thought Mrs. Woffington, with a little feminine smirk.
+
+"I will be revenged," vowed Pomander, clinching his teeth.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+COMPARE a November day with a May day. They are not more unlike than a
+beautiful woman in company with a man she is indifferent to or averse,
+and the same woman with the man of her heart by her side.
+
+At sight of Mr. Vane, all her coldness and _nonchalance_ gave way to a
+gentle complacency; and when she spoke to him, her voice, so clear and
+cutting in the late _assaut d'armes,_ sank of its own accord into the
+most tender, delicious tone imaginable.
+
+Mr. Vane and she made love. He pleased her, and she desired to please
+him. My reader knows her wit, her _finesse,_ her fluency; but he cannot
+conceive how god-like was her way of making love. I can put a few of the
+corpses of her words upon paper, but where are the heavenly tones--now
+calm and convincing, now soft and melancholy, now thrilling with
+tenderness, now glowing with the fiery eloquence of passion? She told
+him that she knew the map of his face; that for some days past he had
+been subject to an influence adverse to her. She begged him, calmly, for
+his own sake, to distrust false friends, and judge her by his own heart,
+eyes, and judgment. He promised her he would.
+
+"And I do trust you, in spite of them all," said he; "for your face is
+the shrine of sincerity and candor. I alone know you."
+
+Then she prayed him to observe the heartlessness of his sex, and to say
+whether she had done ill to hide the riches of her heart from the cold
+and shallow, and to keep them all for one honest man, "who will be my
+friend, I hope," said she, "as well as my lover."
+
+"Ah!" said Vane, "that is my ambition."
+
+"We actresses," said she, "make good the old proverb, 'Many lovers, but
+few friends.' And oh, 'tis we who need a friend. Will you be mine?"
+
+While he lived, he would.
+
+In turn, he begged her to be generous, and tell him the way for him,
+Ernest Vane, inferior in wit and address to many of her admirers, to win
+her heart from them all.
+
+This singular woman's answer is, I think, worth attention.
+
+"Never act in my presence; never try to be eloquent, or clever; never
+force a sentiment, or turn a phrase. Remember, I am the goddess of
+tricks. Do not descend to competition with me and the Pomanders of the
+world. At all littlenesses, you will ever be awkward in my eyes. And I
+am a woman. I must have a superior to love--lie open to my eye. Light
+itself is not more beautiful than the upright man, whose bosom is open
+to the day. Oh yes! fear not you will be my superior, dear; for in me
+honesty has to struggle against the habits of my art and life. Be simple
+and sincere, and I shall love you, and bless the hour you shone upon my
+cold, artificial life. Ah, Ernest!" said she, fixing on his eye her own,
+the fire of which melted into tenderness as she spoke, "be my friend.
+Come between me and the temptations of an unprotected life--the
+recklessness of a vacant heart."
+
+He threw himself at her feet. He called her an angel. He told her he
+was unworthy of her, but that he would try and deserve her. Then he
+hesitated, and trembling he said:
+
+"I will be frank and loyal. Had I not better tell you everything? You
+will not hate me for a confession I make myself?"
+
+"I shall like you better--oh! so much better!"
+
+"Then I will own to you--"
+
+"Oh, do not tell me you have ever loved before me! I could not bear to
+hear it!" cried this inconsistent personage.
+
+The other weak creature needed no more.
+
+"I see plainly I never loved but you," said he.
+
+"Let me hear that only!" cried she; "I am jealous even of the past. Say
+you never loved but me. Never mind whether it is true. My child, you do
+not even yet know love. Ernest, shall I make you love--as none of your
+sex ever loved--with heart, and brain, and breath, and life, and soul?"
+
+With these rapturous words, she poured the soul of love into his eyes;
+he forgot everything in the world but her; he dissolved in present
+happiness and vowed himself hers forever. And she, for her part, bade
+him but retain her esteem and no woman ever went further in love than
+she would. She was a true epicure. She had learned that passion, vulgar
+in itself, is god-like when based upon esteem.
+
+This tender scene was interrupted by the call-boy, who brought Mrs.
+Woffington a note from the manager, informing her there would be
+no rehearsal. This left her at liberty, and she proceeded to take a
+somewhat abrupt leave of Mr. Vane. He was endeavoring to persuade her
+to let him be her companion until dinner-time (she was to be his quest),
+when Pomander entered the room.
+
+Mrs. Woffington, however, was not to be persuaded, she excused herself
+on the score of a duty which she said she had to perform, and whispering
+as she passed Pomander, "Keep your own counsel," she went out rather
+precipitately.
+
+Vane looked slightly disappointed.
+
+Sir Charles, who had returned to see whether (as he fully expected) she
+had told Vane everything--and who, at that moment, perhaps, would
+not have been sorry had Mrs. Woffington's lover called him to serious
+account--finding it was not her intention to make mischief, and not
+choosing to publish his own defeat, dropped quietly into his old line,
+and determined to keep the lovers in sight, and play for revenge.
+He smiled and said: "My good sir, nobody can hope to monopolize Mrs.
+Woffington. She has others to do justice to besides you."
+
+To his surprise, Mr. Vane turned instantly round upon him, and, looking
+him haughtily in the face, said: "Sir Charles Pomander, the settled
+malignity with which you pursue that lady is unmanly and offensive to
+me, who love her. Let our acquaintance cease here, if you please, or let
+her be sacred from your venomous tongue."
+
+Sir Charles bowed stiffly, and replied, that it was only due to himself
+to withdraw a protection so little appreciated.
+
+The two friends were in the very act of separating forever, when who
+should run in but Pompey, the renegade. He darted up to Sir Charles, and
+said: "Massa Pomannah she in a coach, going to 10, Hercules Buildings.
+I'm in a hurry, Massa Pomannah."
+
+"Where?" cried Pomander. "Say that again."
+
+"10, Hercules Buildings, Lambeth. Me in a hurry, Massa Pomannah."
+
+"Faithful child, there's a guinea for thee. Fly!"
+
+The slave flew, and, taking a short cut, caught and fastened on to the
+slow vehicle in the Strand.
+
+"It is a house of rendezvous," said Sir Charles, half to himself, half
+to Mr. Vane. He repeated in triumph: "It is a house of rendezvous." He
+then, recovering his _sang-froid,_ and treating it all as a matter of
+course, explained that at 10, Hercules Buildings, was a fashionable
+shop, with entrances from two streets; that the best Indian scarfs and
+shawls were sold there, and that ladies kept their carriages waiting an
+immense time in the principal street, while they were supposed to be in
+the shop, or the show-room. He then went on to say that he had only this
+morning heard that the intimacy between Mrs. Woffington and a Colonel
+Murthwaite, although publicly broken off for prudential reasons, was
+still clandestinely carried on. She had, doubtless, slipped away to meet
+the colonel.
+
+Mr. Vane turned pale.
+
+"No! I will not suspect. I will not dog her like a bloodhound," cried
+he.
+
+"I will!" said Pomander.
+
+"You! By what right?"
+
+"The right of curiosity. I will know whether it is you who are imposed
+on, or whether you are right, and all the world is deceived in this
+woman."
+
+He ran out; but, for all his speed, when he got into the street there
+was the jealous lover at his elbow. They darted with all speed into the
+Strand; got a coach. Sir Charles, on the box, gave Jehu a guinea, and
+took the reins--and by a Niagara of whipcord they attained Lambeth; and
+at length, to his delight, Pomander saw another coach before him with a
+gold-laced black slave behind it. The coach stopped; and the slave came
+to the door. The shop in question was a few hundred yards distant. The
+adroit Sir Charles not only stopped but turned his coach, and let the
+horses crawl back toward London; he also flogged the side panels to
+draw the attention of Mr. Vane. That gentleman looked through the little
+circular window at the back of the vehicle, and saw a lady paying the
+coachman. There was no mistaking her figure. This lady, then, followed
+at a distance by her slave, walked on toward Hercules Buildings; and it
+was his miserable fate to see her look uneasily round, and at last glide
+in at a side door, close to the silk-mercer's shop.
+
+The carriage stopped. Sir Charles came himself to the door.
+
+"Now, Vane," said he, "before I consent to go any further in this
+business, you must promise me to be cool and reasonable. I abhor
+absurdity; and there must be no swords drawn for this little hypocrite."
+
+"I submit to no dictation," said Vane, white as a sheet.
+
+"You have benefited so far by my knowledge," said the other politely;
+"let me, who am self-possessed, claim some influence with you."
+
+"Forgive me!" said poor Vane. "My ang--my sorrow that such an angel
+should be a monster of deceit." He could say no more.
+
+They walked to the shop.
+
+"How she peeped, this way and that," said Pomander, "sly little Woffy!
+
+"No! on second thoughts," said he, "it is the other street we must
+reconnoiter; and, if we don't see her there, we will enter the shop,
+and by dint of this purse we shall soon untie the knot of the Woffington
+riddle."
+
+Vane leaned heavily on his tormentor.
+
+"I am faint," said he.
+
+"Lean on me, my dear friend," said Sir Charles. "Your weakness will
+leave you in the next street."
+
+In the next street they discovered--nothing. In the shop, they found--no
+Mrs. Woffington. They returned to the principal street. Vane began to
+hope there was no positive evidence. Suddenly three stories up a fiddle
+was heard. Pomander took no notice, but Vane turned red; this put Sir
+Charles upon the scent.
+
+"Stay!" said he. "Is not that an Irish tune?"
+
+Vane groaned. He covered his face with his hands, and hissed out:
+
+"It is her favorite tune."
+
+"Aha!" said Pomander. "Follow me!"
+
+They crept up the stairs, Pomander in advance; they heard the signs of
+an Irish orgie--a rattling jig played and danced with the inspiriting
+interjections of that frolicsome nation. These sounds ceased after a
+while, and Pomander laid his hand on his friend's shoulder.
+
+"I prepare you," said he, "for what you are sure to see. This woman
+was an Irish bricklayer's daughter, and 'what is bred in the bone never
+comes out of the flesh;' you will find her sitting on some Irishman's
+knee, whose limbs are ever so much stouter than yours. You are the man
+of her head, and this is the man of her heart. These things would be
+monstrous, if they were not common; incredible, if we did not see them
+every day. But this poor fellow, whom probably she deceives as well as
+you, is not to be sacrificed like a dog to your unjust wrath; he is as
+superior to her as you are to him."
+
+"I will commit no violence," said Vane. "I still hope she is innocent."
+
+Pomander smiled, and said he hoped so too.
+
+"And if she is what you think, I will but show her she is known, and,
+blaming myself as much as her--oh yes! more than her!--I will go down
+this night to Shropshire, and never speak word to her again in this
+world or the next."
+
+"Good," said Sir Charles.
+
+ "'Le bruit est pour le fat, la plainte est pour le sot,
+ L'honndete homine trompe s'eloigne et ne dit mot.'
+
+Are you ready?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then follow me."
+
+Turning the handle gently, he opened the door like lightning, and was in
+the room. Vane's head peered over his shoulder. She was actually there!
+
+For once in her life, the cautious, artful woman was taken by surprise.
+She gave a little scream, and turned as red as fire. But Sir Charles
+surprised somebody else even more than he did poor Mrs. Woffington.
+
+It would be impertinent to tantalize my reader, but I flatter myself
+this history is not written with power enough to do that, and I may
+venture to leave him to guess whom Sir Charles Pomander surprised more
+than he did the actress, while I go back for the lagging sheep.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+JAMES TRIPLET, water in his eye, but fire in his heart, went home on
+wings. Arrived there, he anticipated curiosity by informing all hands he
+should answer no questions. Only in the intervals of a work, which was
+to take the family out of all its troubles, he should gradually unfold
+a tale, verging on the marvelous--a tale whose only fault was, that
+fiction, by which alone the family could hope to be great, paled beside
+it. He then seized some sheets of paper fished out some old dramatic
+sketches, and a list of _dramatis personae,_ prepared years ago, and
+plunged into a comedy. As he wrote, true to his promise, he painted,
+Triplet-wise, that story which we have coldly related, and made it
+appear, to all but Mrs. Triplet, that he was under the tutela, or
+express protection of Mrs. Woffington, who would push his fortunes until
+the only difficulty would be to keep arrogance out of the family heart.
+
+Mrs. Triplet groaned aloud. "You have brought the picture home, I see,"
+said she.
+
+"Of course I have. She is going to give me a sitting."
+
+"At what hour, of what day?" said Mrs. Triplet, with a world of meaning.
+
+"She did not say," replied Triplet, avoiding his wife's eye.
+
+"I know she did not," was the answer. "I would rather you had brought me
+the ten shillings than this fine story," said she.
+
+"Wife!" said Triplet, "don't put me into a frame of mind in which
+successful comedies are not written." He scribbled away; but his wife's
+despondency told upon the man of disappointments. Then he stuck fast;
+then he became fidgety.
+
+"Do keep those children quiet!" said the father.
+
+"Hush, my dears," said the mother; "let your father write. Comedy seems
+to give you more trouble than tragedy, James," added she, soothingly.
+
+"Yes," was his answer. "Sorrow comes somehow more natural to me; but for
+all that I have got a bright thought, Mrs. Triplet. Listen, all of you.
+You see, Jane, they are all at a sumptuous banquet, all the _dramatis
+personae,_ except the poet."
+
+Triplet went on writing, and reading his work out: "Music, sparkling
+wine, massive plate, rose-water in the hand-glasses, soup, fish--shall
+I have three sorts of fish? I will; they are cheap in this market. Ah!
+Fortune, you wretch, here at least I am your master, and I'll make you
+know it--venison," wrote Triplet, with a malicious grin, "game, pickles
+and provocatives in the center of the table; then up jumps one of the
+guests, and says he--"
+
+"Oh dear, I am so hungry."
+
+This was not from the comedy, but from one of the boys.
+
+"And so am I," cried a girl.
+
+"That is an absurd remark, Lysimachus," said Triplet with a suspicious
+calmness. "How can a boy be hungry three hours after breakfast?"
+
+"But, father, there was no breakfast for breakfast."
+
+"Now I ask you, Mrs. Triplet," appealed the author, "how I am to write
+comic scenes if you let Lysimachus and Roxalana here put the heavy
+business in every five minutes?"
+
+"Forgive them; the poor things are hungry."
+
+"Then let them be hungry in another room," said the irritated scribe.
+"They shan't cling round my pen, and paralyze it, just when it is going
+to make all our fortunes; but you women," snapped Triplet the Just,
+"have no consideration for people's feelings. Send them all to bed;
+every man Jack of them!"
+
+Finding the conversation taking this turn, the brats raised a unanimous
+howl.
+
+Triplet darted a fierce glance at them. "Hungry, hungry," cried he;
+"is that a proper expression to use before a father who is sitting
+down here, all gayety" (scratching wildly with his pen) "and hilarity"
+(scratch) "to write a com--com--" he choked a moment; then in a very
+different voice, all sadness and tenderness, he said: "Where's the
+youngest--where's Lucy? As if I didn't know you are hungry."
+
+Lucy came to him directly. He took her on his knee, pressed her gently
+to his side, and wrote silently. The others were still.
+
+"Father," said Lucy, aged five, the germ of a woman, "I am not very
+hungry."
+
+"And I am not hungry at all," said bluff Lysimachus, taking his sister's
+cue; then going upon his own tact he added, "I had a great piece of
+bread and butter yesterday!"
+
+"Wife, they will drive me mad!" and he dashed at the paper.
+
+The second boy explained to his mother, _sotto voce:_ "Mother, he _made_
+us hungry out of his book."
+
+"It is a beautiful book," said Lucy. "Is it a cookery book?"
+
+Triplet roared: "Do you hear that?" inquired he, all trace of ill-humor
+gone. "Wife," he resumed, after a gallant scribble, "I took that sermon
+I wrote."
+
+"And beautiful it was, James. I'm sure it quite cheered me up with
+thinking that we shall all be dead before so very long."
+
+"Well, the reverend gentleman would not have it. He said it was too hard
+upon sin. 'You run at the Devil like a mad bull,' said he. 'Sell it in
+Lambeth, sir; here calmness and decency are before everything,' says he.
+'My congregation expect to go to heaven down hill. Perhaps the chaplain
+of Newgate might give you a crown for it,' said he," and Triplet dashed
+viciously at the paper. "Ah!" sighed he, "if my friend Mrs. Woffington
+would but drop these stupid comedies and take to tragedy, this house
+would soon be all smiles."
+
+"Oh James!" replied Mrs. Triplet, almost peevishly, "how can you expect
+anything but fine words from that woman? You won't believe what all the
+world says. You will trust to your own good heart."
+
+"I haven't a good heart," said the poor, honest fellow. "I spoke like a
+brute to you just now."
+
+"Never mind, James," said the woman. "I wonder how you put up with me
+at all--a sick, useless creature. I often wish to die, for your sake. I
+know you would do better. I am such a weight round your neck."
+
+The man made no answer, but he put Lucy gently down, and went to the
+woman, and took her forehead to his bosom, and held it there; and after
+a while returned with silent energy to his comedy.
+
+"Play us a tune on the fiddle, father."
+
+"Ay, do, husband. That helps you often in your writing."
+
+Lysimachus brought him the fiddle, and Triplet essayed a merry tune; but
+it came out so doleful, that he shook his head, and laid the
+instrument down. Music must be in the heart, or it will come out of the
+fingers--notes, not music.
+
+"No," said he; "let us be serious and finish this comedy slap off.
+Perhaps it hitches because I forgot to invoke the comic muse. She must
+be a black-hearted jade, if she doesn't come with merry notions to a
+poor devil, starving in the midst of his hungry little ones."
+
+"We are past help from heathen goddesses," said the woman. "We must pray
+to Heaven to look down upon us and our children."
+
+The man looked up with a very bad expression on his countenance.
+
+"You forget," said he sullenly, "our street is very narrow, and the
+opposite houses are very high."
+
+"James!"
+
+"How can Heaven be expected to see what honest folk endure in so dark a
+hole as this?" cried the man, fiercely.
+
+"James," said the woman, with fear and sorrow, "what words are these?"
+
+The man rose and flung his pen upon the floor.
+
+"Have we given honesty a fair trial--yes or no?"
+
+"No!" said the woman, without a moment's hesitation; "not till we die,
+as we have lived. Heaven is higher than the sky; children," said she,
+lest perchance her husband's words should have harmed their young souls,
+"the sky is above the earth, and heaven is higher than the sky; and
+Heaven is just."
+
+"I suppose it is so," said the man, a little cowed by her. "Everybody
+says so. I think so, at bottom, myself; but I can't see it. I want to
+see it, but I can't!" cried he, fiercely. "Have my children offended
+Heaven? They will starve--they will die! If I was Heaven, I'd be just,
+and send an angel to take these children's part. They cried to me for
+bread--I had no bread; so I gave them hard words. The moment I had done
+that I knew it was all over. God knows it took a long while to break my
+heart; but it is broken at last; quite, quite broken! broken! broken!"
+
+And the poor thing laid his head upon the table, and sobbed, beyond all
+power of restraint. The children cried round him, scarce knowing why;
+and Mrs. Triplet could only say, "My poor husband!" and prayed and wept
+upon the couch where she lay.
+
+It was at this juncture that a lady, who had knocked gently and unheard,
+opened the door, and with a light step entered the apartment; but no
+sooner had she caught sight of Triplet's anguish, than, saying hastily,
+"Stay, I forgot something," she made as hasty an exit.
+
+This gave Triplet a moment to recover himself; and Mrs. Woffington,
+whose lynx eye had comprehended all at a glance, and who had determined
+at once what line to take, came flying in again, saying:
+
+"Wasn't somebody inquiring for an angel? Here I am. See, Mr. Triplet;"
+and she showed him a note, which said: "Madam, you are an angel. From a
+perfect stranger," explained she; "so it must be true."
+
+"Mrs. Woffington," said Mr. Triplet to his wife. Mrs. Woffington planted
+herself in the middle of the floor, and with a comical glance, setting
+her arms akimbo, uttered a shrill whistle.
+
+"Now you will see another angel--there are two sorts of them."
+
+Pompey came in with a basket; she took it from him.
+
+"Lucifer, avaunt!" cried she, in a terrible tone, that drove him to the
+wall; "and wait outside the door," added she, conversationally.
+
+"I heard you were ill, ma'am, and I have brought you some physic--black
+draughts from Burgundy;" and she smiled. And, recovered from their
+first surprise, young and old began to thaw beneath that witching,
+irresistible smile. "Mrs. Triplet, I have come to give your husband a
+sitting; will you allow me to eat my little luncheon with you? I am so
+hungry." Then she clapped her hands, and in ran Pompey. She sent him
+for a pie she professed to have fallen in love with at the corner of the
+street.
+
+"Mother," said Alcibiades, "will the lady give me a bit of her pie?"
+
+"Hush! you rude boy!" cried the mother.
+
+"She is not much of a lady if she does not," cried Mrs. Woffington.
+"Now, children, first let us look at--ahem--a comedy. Nineteen _dramatis
+personae!_ What do you say, children, shall we cut out seven, or
+nine? that is the question. You can't bring your armies into our
+drawing-rooms, Mr. Dagger-and-bowl. Are you the Marlborough of comedy?
+Can you marshal battalions on a turkey carpet, and make gentlefolks
+witty in platoons? What is this in the first act? A duel, and both
+wounded! You butcher!"
+
+"They are not to die, ma'am!" cried Triplet, deprecatingly "upon my
+honor," said he, solemnly, spreading his bands on his bosom.
+
+"Do you think I'll trust their lives with you? No! Give me a pen; this
+is the way we run people through the body." Then she wrote ("business."
+Araminta looks out of the garret window. Combatants drop their swords,
+put their hands to their hearts, and stagger off O. P. and P. S.) "Now,
+children, who helps me to lay the cloth?"
+
+"I!"
+
+"And I!" (The children run to the cupboard.)
+
+_Mrs. Triplet_ (half rising). "Madam, I--can't think of allowing you."
+
+Mrs. Woffington replied: "Sit down, madam, or I must use brute force.
+If you are ill, be ill--till I make you well. Twelve plates, quick!
+Twenty-four knives, quicker! Forty-eight forks quickest!" She met the
+children with the cloth and laid it; then she met them again and laid
+knives and forks, all at full gallop, which mightily excited the bairns.
+Pompey came in with the pie, Mrs. Woffington took it and set it before
+Triplet.
+
+_Mrs. Woffington._ "Your coat, Mr. Triplet, if you please."
+
+_Mr. Triplet._ "My coat, madam!"
+
+_Mrs. Woffington._ "Yes, off with it--there's a hole in it--and carve."
+Then she whipped to the other end of the table and stitched like
+wild-fire. "Be pleased to cast your eyes on that, Mrs. Triplet. Pass
+it to the lady, young gentleman. Fire away, Mr. Triplet, never mind us
+women. Woffington's housewife, ma'am, fearful to the eye, only it holds
+everything in the world, and there is a small space for everything
+else--to be returned by the bearer. Thank you, sir." (Stitches away like
+lightning at the coat.) "Eat away, children! now is your time; when once
+I begin, the pie will soon end; I do everything so quick."
+
+_Roxalana._ "The lady sews quicker than you, mother."
+
+_Woffington._ "Bless the child, don't come so near my sword-arm; the
+needle will go into your eye, and out at the back of your head."
+
+This nonsense made the children giggle.
+
+"The needle will be lost--the child no more--enter undertaker--house
+turned topsy-turvy--father shows Woffington to the door--off she
+goes with a face as long and dismal as some people's comedies--no
+names--crying fine chan-ey oranges."
+
+The children, all but Lucy, screeched with laughter.
+
+Lucy said gravely:
+
+"Mother, the lady is very funny."
+
+"You will be as funny when you are as well paid for it."
+
+This just hit poor Trip's notion of humor, and he began to choke, with
+his mouth full of pie.
+
+"James, take care," said Mrs. Triplet, sad and solemn.
+
+James looked up.
+
+"My wife is a good woman, madam," said he; "but deficient in an
+important particular."
+
+"Oh, James!"
+
+"Yes, my dear. I regret to say you have no sense of humor; nummore than
+a cat, Jane."
+
+"What! because the poor thing can't laugh at your comedy?"
+
+"No, ma'am; but she laughs at nothing."
+
+"Try her with one of your tragedies, my lad."
+
+"I am sure, James," said the poor, good, lackadaisical woman, "if I
+don't laugh, it is not for want of the will. I used to be a very hearty
+laugher," whined she; "but I haven't laughed this two years."
+
+"Oh, indeed!" said the Woffington. "Then the next two years you shall do
+nothing else."
+
+"Ah, madam!" said Triplet. "That passes the art, even of the great
+comedian."
+
+"Does it?" said the actress, coolly.
+
+_Lucy._ "She is not a comedy lady. You don't ever cry, pretty lady?"
+
+_Woffington_ (ironically). "Oh, of course not."
+
+_Lucy_ (confidentially). "Comedy is crying. Father cried all the time he
+was writing his one."
+
+Triplet turned red as fire.
+
+"Hold your tongue," said he. "I was bursting with merriment. Wife,
+our children talk too much; they put their noses into everything, and
+criticise their own father."
+
+"Unnatural offspring!" laughed the visitor.
+
+"And when they take up a notion, Socrates couldn't convince them to
+the contrary. For instance, madam, all this morning they thought fit to
+assume that they were starving."
+
+"So we were," said Lysimachus, "until the angel came; and the devil went
+for the pie."
+
+"There--there--there! Now, you mark my words; we shall never get that
+idea out of their heads--"
+
+"Until," said Mrs. Woffington, lumping a huge cut of pie into Roxalana's
+plate, "we put a very different idea into their stomachs." This and the
+look she cast on Mrs. Triplet fairly caught that good, though somber
+personage. She giggled; put her hand to her face, and said: "I'm sure I
+ask your pardon, ma'am."
+
+It was no use; the comedian had determined they should all laugh, and
+they were made to laugh. Then she rose, and showed them how to drink
+healths _a la Francaise;_ and keen were her little admirers to touch her
+glass with theirs. And the pure wine she had brought did Mrs. Triplet
+much good, too; though not so much as the music and sunshine of her face
+and voice. Then, when their stomachs were full of good food, and the
+soul of the grape tingled in their veins, and their souls glowed under
+her great magnetic power, she suddenly seized the fiddle, and showed
+them another of her enchantments. She put it on her knee, and played
+a tune that would have made gout, cholic and phthisic dance upon their
+last legs. She played to the eye as well as to the ear, with such a
+smart gesture of the bow, and such a radiance of face as she looked
+at them, that whether the music came out of her wooden shell, or her
+horse-hair wand, or her bright self, seemed doubtful. They pranced on
+their chairs; they could not keep still. She jumped up; so did they. She
+gave a wild Irish horroo. She put the fiddle in Triplet's hand.
+
+"The wind that shakes the barley, ye divil!" cried she.
+
+Triplet went _hors de lui;_ he played like Paganini, or an intoxicated
+demon. Woffington covered the buckle in gallant style; she danced, the
+children danced. Triplet fiddled and danced, and flung his limbs in wild
+dislocation: the wineglasses danced; and last, Mrs. Triplet was observed
+to be bobbing about on her sofa, in a monstrous absurd way, droning out
+the tune, and playing her hands with mild enjoyment, all to herself.
+Woffington pointed out this pantomimic soliloquy to the two boys, with
+a glance full of fiery meaning. This was enough. With a fiendish yell,
+they fell upon her, and tore her, shrieking, off the sofa. And lo! when
+she was once launched, she danced up to her husband, and set to him with
+a meek deliberation that was as funny as any part of the scene. So
+then the mover of all this slipped on one side, and let the stone of
+merriment--roll--and roll it did; there was no swimming, sprawling, or
+irrelevant frisking; their feet struck the ground for every note of the
+fiddle, pat as its echo, their faces shone, their hearts leaped, and
+their poor frozen natures came out, and warmed themselves at the glowing
+melody; a great sunbeam had come into their abode, and these human motes
+danced in it. The elder ones recovered their gravity first, they sat
+down breathless, and put their hands to their hearts; they looked at
+one another, and then at the goddess who had revived them. Their first
+feeling was wonder; were they the same, who, ten minutes ago, were
+weeping together? Yes! ten minutes ago they were rayless, joyless,
+hopeless. Now the sun was in their hearts, and sorrow and sighing were
+fled, as fogs disperse before the god of day. It was magical; could
+a mortal play upon the soul of man, woman and child like this? Happy
+Woffington! and suppose this was more than half acting, but such acting
+as Triplet never dreamed of; and to tell the honest, simple truth, I
+myself should not have suspected it; but children are sharper than one
+would think, and Alcibiades Triplet told, in after years, that, when
+they were all dancing except the lady, he caught sight of her face--and
+it was quite, quite grave, and even sad; but, as often as she saw him
+look at her, she smiled at him so gayly--he couldn't believe it was the
+same face.
+
+If it was art, glory be to such art so worthily applied! and honor to
+such creatures as this, that come like sunshine into poor men's houses,
+and tune drooping hearts to daylight and hope!
+
+The wonder of these worthy people soon changed to gratitude. Mrs.
+Woffington stopped their mouths at once.
+
+"No, no!" cried she; "if you really love me, no scenes; I hate them.
+Tell these brats to kiss me, and let me go. I must sit for my picture
+after dinner; it is a long way to Bloomsbury Square."
+
+The children needed no bidding; they clustered round her, and poured out
+their innocent hearts as children only do.
+
+"I shall pray for you after father and mother," said one.
+
+"I shall pray for you after daily bread," said Lucy, "because we were
+_tho_ hungry till you came!"
+
+"My poor children!" cried Woffington, and hard to grown-up actors,
+as she called us, but sensitive to children, she fairly melted as she
+embraced them.
+
+It was at this precise juncture that the door was unceremoniously
+opened, and the two gentlemen burst upon the scene!
+
+My reader now guesses whom Sir Charles Pomander surprised more than he
+did Mrs. Woffington. He could not for the life of him comprehend what
+she was doing, and what was her ulterior object. The _nil admirari_ of
+the fine gentleman deserted him, and he gazed open-mouthed, like the
+veriest chaw-bacon.
+
+The actress, unable to extricate herself in a moment from the children,
+stood there like Charity, in New College Chapel, while the mother kissed
+her hand, and the father quietly dropped tears, like some leaden water
+god in the middle of a fountain.
+
+Vane turned hot and cold by turns, with joy and shame. Pomander's genius
+came to the aid of their embarrassment.
+
+"Follow my lead," whispered he. "What! Mrs. Woffington here!" cried he;
+then he advanced business-like to Triplet. "We are aware, sir, of your
+various talents, and are come to make a demand on them. I, sir, am the
+unfortunate possessor of frescoes; time has impaired their indelicacy,
+no man can restore it as you can."
+
+"Augh! sir! sir!" said the gratified goose.
+
+"My Cupid's bows are walking-sticks, and my Venus's noses are snubbed.
+You must set all that straight on your own terms, Mr. Triplet."
+
+"In a single morning all shall bloom again, sir! Whom would you wish
+them to resemble in feature? I have lately been praised for my skill in
+portraiture." (Glancing at Mrs. Woffington.)
+
+"Oh!" said Pomander, carelessly, "you need not go far for Venuses and
+Cupids, I suppose?"
+
+"I see, sir; my wife and children. Thank you, sir; thank you."
+
+Pomander stared; Mrs. Woffington laughed.
+
+Now it was Vane's turn.
+
+"Let me have a copy of verses from your pen. I shall have five pounds at
+your disposal for them."
+
+"The world has found me out!" thought Triplet, blinded by his vanity.--
+
+"The subject, sir?"
+
+"No matter," said Vane--"no matter."
+
+"Oh, of course it does not matter to me," said Triplet, with some
+_hauteur,_ and assuming poetic omnipotence. "Only, when one knows the
+subject, one can sometimes make the verses apply better."
+
+"Write then, since you are so confident, upon Mrs. Woffington."
+
+"Ah! that is a subject! They shall be ready in an hour!" cried Trip,
+in whose imagination Parnassus was a raised counter. He had in a teacup
+some lines on Venus and Mars which he could not but feel would fit
+Thalia and Croesus, or Genius and Envy, equally well. "In one hour,
+sir," said Triplet, "the article shall be executed, and delivered at
+your house."
+
+Mrs. Woffington called Vane to her, with an engaging smile. A month ago
+he would have hoped she would not have penetrated him and Sir Charles;
+but he knew her better now. He came trembling.
+
+"Look me in the face, Mr. Vane," said she, gently, but firmly.
+
+"I cannot!" said he. "How can I ever look you in the face again?"
+
+"Ah! you disarm me! But I must strike you, or this will never end. Did
+I not promise that, when you had earned my _if_ esteem, I would
+tell you--what no mortal knows--Ernest, my whole story? I delay the
+confession. It will cost me so many blushes, so many tears! And yet I
+hope, if you knew all, you would pity and forgive me. Meantime, did I
+ever tell you a falsehood?"
+
+"Oh no!"
+
+"Why doubt me then, when I tell you that I hold all your sex cheap
+but you? Why suspect me of Heaven knows what, at the dictation of a
+heartless, brainless fop--on the word of a known liar, like the world?"
+
+Black lightning flashed from her glorious eyes as she administered this
+royal rebuke. Vane felt what a poor creature he was, and his face showed
+such burning shame and contrition, that he obtained his pardon without
+speaking.
+
+"There," said she, kindly, "do not let us torment one another. I forgive
+you. Let me make you happy, Ernest. Is that a great favor to ask? I can
+make you happier than your brightest dream of happiness, if you will let
+yourself be happy."
+
+They rejoined the others; but Vane turned his back on Pomander, and
+would not look at him.
+
+"Sir Charles," said Mrs. Woffington gayly; for she scorned to admit the
+fine gentleman to the rank of a permanent enemy, "you will be of our
+party, I trust, at dinner?"
+
+"Why, no, madam; I fear I cannot give myself that pleasure to-day." Sir
+Charles did not choose to swell the triumph. "Mr. Vane, good day!"
+said he, rather dryly. "Mr. Triplet--madam--your most obedient!" and,
+self-possessed at top, but at bottom crestfallen, he bowed himself away.
+
+Sir Charles, however, on descending the stair and gaining the street,
+caught sight of a horseman, riding uncertainly about, and making his
+horse curvet, to attract attention.
+
+He soon recognized one of his own horses, and upon it the servant he had
+left behind to dog that poor innocent country lady. The servant sprang
+off his horse and touched his hat. He informed his master that he had
+kept with the carriage until ten o'clock this morning, when he had
+ridden away from it at Barnet, having duly pumped the servants as
+opportunity offered.
+
+"Who is she?" cried Sir Charles.
+
+"Wife of a Cheshire squire, Sir Charles," was the reply.
+
+"His name? Whither goes she in town?"
+
+"Her name is Mrs. Vane, Sir Charles. She is going to her husband."
+
+"Curious!" cried Sir Charles. "I wish she had no husband. No! I wish she
+came from Shropshire," and he chuckled at the notion.
+
+"If you please, Sir Charles," said the man, "is not Willoughby in
+Cheshire?"
+
+"No," cried his master; "it is in Shropshire. What! eh! Five guineas for
+you if that lady comes from Willoughby in Shropshire.
+
+"That is where she comes from then, Sir Charles, and she is going to
+Bloomsbury Square."
+
+"How long have they been married?"
+
+"Not more than twelve months, Sir Charles."
+
+Pomander gave the man ten guineas instead of five on the spot.
+
+Reader, it was too true! Mr. Vane--the good, the decent, the
+churchgoer--Mr. Vane, whom Mrs. Woffington had selected to improve her
+morals--Mr. Vane was a married man!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+As soon as Pomander had drawn his breath and realized this discovery, he
+darted upstairs, and with all the demure calmness he could assume,
+told Mr. Vane, whom he met descending, that he was happy to find his
+engagements permitted him to join the party in Bloomsbury Square. He
+then flung himself upon his servant's horse.
+
+Like Iago, he saw the indistinct outline of a glorious and a most
+malicious plot; it lay crude in his head and heart at present; thus much
+he saw clearly, that, if he could time Mrs. Vane's arrival so that she
+should pounce upon the Woffington at her husband's table, he might be
+present at and enjoy the public discomfiture of a man and woman who
+had wounded his vanity. Bidding his servant make the best of his way
+to Bloomsbury Square, Sir Charles galloped in that direction himself,
+intending first to inquire whether Mrs. Vane was arrived, and, if not,
+to ride toward Islington and meet her. His plan was frustrated by an
+accident; galloping round a corner, his horse did not change his leg
+cleverly, and, the pavement being also loose, slipped and fell on his
+side, throwing his rider upon the _trottoir._ The horse got up and
+trembled violently, but was unhurt. The rider lay motionless, except
+that his legs quivered on the pavement. They took him up and conveyed
+him into a druggist's shop, the master of which practiced chirurgery. He
+had to be sent for; and, before he could be found, Sir Charles recovered
+his reason, so much so, that when the chirurgeon approached with his
+fleam to bleed him, according to the practice of the day, the patient
+drew his sword, and assured the other he would let out every drop of
+blood in his body if he touched him.
+
+He of the shorter but more lethal weapon hastily retreated. Sir Charles
+flung a guinea on the counter, and mounting his horse rode him off
+rather faster than before this accident.
+
+There was a dead silence!
+
+"I believe that gentleman to be the Devil!" said a thoughtful bystander.
+The crowd (it was a century ago) assented _nem. con._
+
+Sir Charles, arrived in Bloomsbury Square, found that the whole party
+was assembled. He therefore ordered his servant to parade before the
+door, and, if he saw Mrs. Vane's carriage enter the Square, to let him
+know, if possible, before she should reach the house. On entering he
+learned that Mr. Vane and his guests were in the garden (a very fine
+one), and joined them there.
+
+Mrs. Vane demands another chapter, in which I will tell the reader who
+she was, and what excuse her husband had for his liaison with Margaret
+Woffington.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+MABEL CHESTER was the beauty and toast of South Shropshire. She had
+refused the hand of half the country squires in a circle of some dozen
+miles, till at last Mr. Vane became her suitor. Besides a handsome face
+and person, Mr. Vane had accomplishments his rivals did not possess. He
+read poetry to her on mossy banks an hour before sunset, and awakened
+sensibilities which her other suitors shocked, and they them.
+
+The lovely Mabel had a taste for beautiful things, without any excess of
+that severe quality called judgment.
+
+I will explain. If you or I, reader, had read to her in the afternoon,
+amid the smell of roses and eglantine, the chirp of the mavis, the hum
+of bees, the twinkling of butterflies, and the tinkle of distant sheep,
+something that combined all these sights, and sounds, and smells--say
+Milton's musical picture of Eden, P. L., lib. 3, and after that "Triplet
+on Kew," she would have instantly pronounced in favor of "Eden"; but
+if _we_ had read her "Milton," and Mr. Vane had read her "Triplet," she
+would have as unhesitatingly preferred "Kew" to "Paradise."
+
+She was a true daughter of Eve; the lady, who, when an angel was telling
+her and her husband the truths of heaven in heaven's own music, slipped
+away into the kitchen, because she preferred hearing the story at
+second-hand, encumbered with digressions, and in mortal but marital
+accents.
+
+When her mother, who guarded Mabel like a dragon, told her Mr. Vane was
+not rich enough, and she really must not give him so many opportunities,
+Mabel cried and embraced the dragon, and said, "Oh, mother!" The
+dragon, finding her ferocity dissolving, tried to shake her off, but the
+goose would cry and embrace the dragon till it melted.
+
+By and by Mr. Vane's uncle died suddenly and left him the great
+Stoken Church estate, and a trunk full of Jacobuses and Queen Anne's
+guineas--his own hoard and his father's--then the dragon spake
+comfortably and said: "My child, he is now the richest man in
+Shropshire. He will not think of you now; so steel your heart."
+
+Then Mabel, contrary to all expectations, did not cry; but, with
+flushing cheek, pledged her life upon Ernest's love and honor: and
+Ernest, as soon as the funeral, etc., left him free, galloped to Mabel,
+to talk of our good fortune. The dragon had done him injustice; that
+was not his weak point. So they were married! and they were very, very
+happy. But, one month after, the dragon died, and that was their first
+grief; but they bore it together.
+
+And Vane was not like the other Shropshire squires. His idea of pleasure
+was something his wife could share. He still rode, walked, and sat with
+her, and read to her, and composed songs for her, and about her, which
+she played and sang prettily enough, in her quiet, lady-like way, and in
+a voice of honey dropping from the comb. Then she kept a keen eye upon
+him; and, when she discovered what dishes he liked, she superintended
+those herself; and, observing that he never failed to eat of a certain
+lemon-pudding the dragon had originated, she always made this pudding
+herself, and she never told her husband she made it.
+
+The first seven months of their marriage was more like blue sky than
+brown earth; and if any one had told Mabel that her husband was a
+mortal, and not an angel, sent to her that her days and nights might
+be unmixed, uninterrupted heaven, she could hardly have realized the
+information.
+
+When a vexatious litigant began to contest the will by which Mr. Vane
+was Lord of Stoken Church, and Mr. Vane went up to London to concert
+the proper means of defeating this attack, Mrs. Vane would gladly have
+compounded by giving the man two or three thousand acres or the whole
+estate, if he wouldn't take less, not to rob her of her husband for
+a month; but she was docile, as she was amorous; so she cried (out of
+sight) a week; and let her darling go with every misgiving a loving
+heart could have; but one! and that one her own heart told her was
+impossible.
+
+The month rolled away--no symptom of a return. For this, Mr. Vane was
+not, in fact, to blame; but, toward the end of the next month, business
+became a convenient excuse. When three months had passed, Mrs. Vane
+became unhappy. She thought he too must feel the separation. She offered
+to come to him. He answered uncandidly. He urged the length, the fatigue
+of the journey. She was silenced; but some time later she began to take
+a new view of his objections. "He is so self-denying," said she. "Dear
+Ernest, he longs for me; but he thinks it selfish to let me travel so
+far alone to see him."
+
+Full of this idea, she yielded to her love. She made her preparations,
+and wrote to him, that, if he did not forbid her peremptorily, he must
+expect to see her at his breakfast-table in a very few days.
+
+Mr. Vane concluded this was a jest, and did not answer this letter at
+all.
+
+Mrs. Vane started. She traveled with all speed; but, coming to a halt
+at ----, she wrote to her husband that she counted on being with him at
+four of the clock on Thursday.
+
+This letter preceded her arrival by a few hours. It was put into his
+hand at the same time with a note from Mrs. Woffington, telling him she
+should be at a rehearsal at Covent Garden. Thinking his wife's letter
+would keep, he threw it on one side into a sort of a tray; and, after a
+hurried breakfast, went out of his house to the theater. He returned, as
+we are aware, with Mrs. Woffington; and also, at her request, with Mr.
+Cibber, for whom they had called on their way. He had forgotten his
+wife's letter, and was entirely occupied with his guests.
+
+Sir Charles Pomander joined them, and found Mr. Colander, the head
+domestic of the London establishment, cutting with a pair of scissors
+every flower Mrs. Woffington fancied, that lady having a passion for
+flowers.
+
+Colander, during his temporary absence from the interior, had appointed
+James Burdock to keep the house, and receive the two remaining guests,
+should they arrive.
+
+This James Burdock was a faithful old country servant, who had come up
+with Mr. Vane, but left his heart at Willoughby. James Burdock had for
+some time been ruminating, and his conclusion was, that his mistress,
+Miss Mabel (as by force of habit he called her), was not treated as she
+deserved.
+
+Burdock had been imported into Mr. Vane's family by Mabel; he had
+carried her in his arms when she was a child; he had held her upon a
+donkey when she was a little girl; and when she became a woman, it was
+he who taught her to stand close to her horse, and give him her foot and
+spring while he lifted her steadily but strongly into her saddle, and,
+when there, it was he who had instructed her that a horse was not a
+machine, that galloping tires it in time, and that galloping it on
+the hard road hammers it to pieces. "I taught the girl," thought James
+within himself.
+
+This honest silver-haired old fellow seemed so ridiculous to Colander,
+the smooth, supercilious Londoner, that he deigned sometimes to converse
+with James, in order to quiz him. This very morning they had had a
+conversation.
+
+"Poor Miss Mabel! dear heart. A twelvemonth married, and nigh six months
+of it a widow, or next door."
+
+"We write to her, James, and entertain her replies, which are at
+considerable length."
+
+"Ay, but we don't read 'em!" said James, with an uneasy glance at the
+tray.
+
+"Invariably, at our leisure; meantime we make ourselves happy among the
+wits and the sirens."
+
+"And she do make others happy among the poor and the ailing."
+
+"Which shows," said Colander, superciliously, "the difference of
+tastes."
+
+Burdock, whose eye had never been off his mistress's handwriting, at
+last took it up and said: "Master Colander, do if ye please, sir, take
+this into master's dressing-room, do now?"
+
+Colander looked down on the missive with dilating eye. "Not a bill,
+James Burdock," said he, reproachfully.
+
+"A bill! bless ye, no. A letter from missus."
+
+No, the dog would not take it in to his master; and poor James, with a
+sigh, replaced it in the tray.
+
+This James Burdock, then, was left in charge of the hall by Colander,
+and it so happened that the change was hardly effected before a hurried
+knocking came to the street door.
+
+"Ay, ay!" grumbled Burdock, "I thought it would not be long. London for
+knocking and ringing all day, and ringing and knocking all night." He
+opened the door reluctantly and suspiciously, and in darted a lady,
+whose features were concealed by a hood. She glided across the hall,
+as if she was making for some point, and old James shuffled after her,
+crying: "Stop, stop! young woman. What is your name, young woman?"
+
+"Why, James Burdock," cried the lady, removing her hood, "have you
+forgotten your mistress?"
+
+"Mistress! Why, Miss Mabel, I ask your pardon, madam--here, John,
+Margery!"
+
+"Hush!" cried Mrs. Vane.
+
+"But where are your trunks, miss? And where's the coach, and Darby and
+Joan? To think of their drawing you all the way here! I'll have 'em into
+your room directly, ma'am. Miss, you've come just in time."
+
+"What a dear, good, stupid old thing you are, James. Where is
+Ernest--Mr. Vane? James, is he well and happy? I want to surprise him."
+
+"Yes, ma'am," said James, looking down.
+
+"I left the old stupid coach at Islington, James. The something--pin was
+loose, or I don't know what. Could I wait two hours there? So I came on
+by myself; you wicked old man, you let me talk, and don't tell me how he
+is."
+
+"Master is main well, ma'am, and thank you," said old Burdock, confused
+and uneasy.
+
+"But is he happy? Of course he is. Are we not to meet to-day after six
+months? Ah! but never mind, they _are_ gone by."
+
+"Lord bless her!" thought the faithful old fellow. "If sitting down and
+crying could help her, I wouldn't be long."
+
+By this time they were in the banqueting-room and at the preparations
+there Mabel gave a start; she then colored. "Oh, he has invited his
+friends to make acquaintance. I had rather we had been alone all this
+day and to-morrow. But he must not know that. No; _his_ friends are _my_
+friends, and shall be too," thought the country wife. She then glanced
+with some misgiving at her traveling attire, and wished she had brought
+_one_ trunk with her.
+
+"James," said she, "where is my room? And, mind, I forbid you to tell a
+soul I am come."
+
+"Your room, Miss Mabel?"
+
+"Well, any room where there is looking-glass and water."
+
+She then went to a door which opened in fact on a short passage leading
+to a room occupied by Mr. Vane himself.
+
+"No, no!" cried James. "That is master's room."
+
+"Well, is not master's room mistress's room, old man? But stay; is he
+there?"
+
+"No, ma'am; he is in the garden, with a power of fine folks."
+
+"They shall not see me till I have made myself a little more decent,"
+said the young beauty, who knew at bottom how little comparatively
+the color of her dress could affect her appearance, and she opened Mr.
+Vane's door and glided in.
+
+Burdock's first determination was, in spite of her injunction, to tell
+Colander; but on reflection he argued: "And then what will they do?
+They will put their heads together, and deceive us some other way. No!"
+thought James, with a touch of spite, "we shall see how they will all
+look." He argued also, that, at sight of his beautiful wife, his master
+must come to his senses, and the Colander faction be defeated; and
+perhaps, by the mercy of Providence, Colander himself turned off.
+
+While thus ruminating, a thundering knock at the door almost knocked him
+off his legs. "There ye go again," said he, and he went angrily to the
+door. This time it was Hunsdon, who was in a desperate hurry to see his
+master.
+
+"Where is Sir Charles Pomander, my honest fellow?" said he.
+
+"In the garden, my Jack-a-dandy!" said Burdock, furiously.
+
+("Honest fellow," among servants, implies some moral inferiority.)
+
+In the garden went Hunsdon. His master--all whose senses were playing
+sentinel--saw him, and left the company to meet him.
+
+"She is in the house, sir."
+
+"Good! Go--vanish!"
+
+Sir Charles looked into the banquet-room; the haunch was being placed on
+the table. He returned with the information. He burned to bring husband
+and wife together; he counted each second lost that postponed this (to
+him) thrilling joy. Oh, how happy he was!--happier than the serpent when
+he saw Eve's white teeth really strike into the apple!
+
+"Shall we pay respect to this haunch, Mr. Quin?" said Vane, gayly.
+
+"If you please, sir," said Quin, gravely. Colander ran down a by-path
+with an immense bouquet, which he arranged for Mrs. Woffington in a vase
+at Mr. Vane's left hand. He then threw open the windows, which were on
+the French plan, and shut within a foot of the lawn.
+
+The musicians in the arbor struck up, and the company, led by Mr.
+Vane and Mrs. Woffington, entered the room. And a charming room it
+was!--light, lofty, and large--adorned in the French way with white and
+gold. The table was an exact oval, and at it everybody could hear what
+any one said; an excellent arrangement where ideaed guests only are
+admitted--which is another excellent arrangement, though I see people
+don't think so.
+
+The repast was luxurious and elegant. There was no profusion of
+unmeaning dishes; each was a _bonne-bouche_--an undeniable delicacy. The
+glass was beautiful, the plates silver. The flowers rose like walls
+from the table; the plate massive and glorious; rose-water in the
+hand-glasses; music crept in from the garden, deliciously subdued into
+what seemed a natural sound. A broad stream of southern sun gushed in
+fiery gold through the open window, and, like a red-hot rainbow, danced
+through the stained glass above it. Existence was a thing to bask in--in
+such a place, and so happy an hour!
+
+The guests were Quin, Mrs. Clive, Mr. Cibber, Sir Charles Pomander, Mrs.
+Woffington, and Messrs. Soaper and Snarl, critics of the day. This pair,
+with wonderful sagacity, had arrived from the street as the haunch
+came from the kitchen. Good-humor reigned; some cuts passed, but as the
+parties professed wit, they gave and took.
+
+Quin carved the haunch, and was happy; Soaper and Snarl eating the same,
+and drinking Toquay, were mellowed and mitigated into human flesh. Mr.
+Vane and Mrs. Woffington were happy; he, because his conscience was
+asleep; and she, because she felt nothing now could shake her hold of
+him. Sir Charles was in a sort of mental chuckle. His head burned, his
+bones ached; but he was in a sort of nervous delight.
+
+"Where is she?" thought he. "What will she do? Will she send her maid
+with a note? How blue he will look! Or will she come herself? She is a
+country wife; there must be a scene. Oh, why doesn't she come into this
+room? She must know we are here! is she watching somewhere?" His brain
+became puzzled, and his senses were sharpened to a point; he was all
+eye, ear and expectation; and this was why he was the only one to hear
+a very slight sound behind the door we have mentioned, and next to
+perceive a lady's glove lying close to that door. Mabel had dropped it
+in her retreat. Putting this and that together, he was led to hope and
+believe she was there, making her toilet, perhaps, and her arrival at
+present unknown.
+
+"Do you expect no one else?" said he, with feigned carelessness, to Mr.
+Vane.
+
+"No," said Mr. Vane, with real carelessness.
+
+"It must be so! What fortune!" thought Pomander.
+
+_Soaper._ "Mr. Cibber looks no older than he did five years ago."
+
+_Snarl._ "There was no room on his face for a fresh wrinkle."
+
+_Soaper._ "He! he! Nay, Mr. Snarl: Mr. Cibber is like old port; the more
+ancient he grows, the more delicious his perfume."
+
+_Snarl._ "And the crustier he gets."
+
+_Clive._ "Mr. Vane, you should always separate those two. Snarl, by
+himself, is just supportable; but, when Soaper paves the way with his
+hypocritical praise, the pair are too much; they are a two-edged sword."
+
+_Woffington._ "Wanting nothing but polish and point."
+
+_Vane._ "Gentlemen, we abandon your neighbor, Mr. Quin, to you."
+
+_Quin._ "They know better. If they don't keep a civil tongue in their
+heads, no fat goes from here to them."
+
+_Cibber._ "Ah, Mr. Vane; this room is delightful; but it makes me sad. I
+knew this house in Lord Longueville's time; an unrivaled gallant, Peggy.
+You may just remember him, Sir Charles?"
+
+_Pomander_ (with his eye on a certain door). "Yes, yes; a gouty old
+fellow."
+
+Cibber fired up. "I wish you may ever be like him. Oh, the beauty, the
+wit, the _petits-soupers_ that used to be here! Longueville was a great
+creature, Mr. Vane. I have known him entertain a fine lady in this room,
+while her rival was fretting and fuming on the other side of that door."
+
+"Ah, indeed!" said Sir Charles.
+
+"More shame for him," said Mr. Vane.
+
+Here was luck! Pomander seized this opportunity of turning the
+conversation to his object. With a malicious twinkle in his eye, he
+inquired of Mr. Cibber what made him fancy the house had lost its virtue
+in Mr. Vane's hands.
+
+"Because," said Cibber, peevishly, "you all want the true _savoir faire_
+nowadays, because there is no _juste milieu,_ young gentlemen. The young
+dogs of the day are all either unprincipled heathen, like yourself, or
+Amadisses, like our worthy host." The old gentleman's face and manners
+were like those of a patriarch, regretting the general decay of virtue,
+not the imaginary diminution of a single vice. He concluded with a sigh
+that, "The true _preux des dames_ went out with the full periwig; stab
+my vitals!"
+
+"A bit of fat, Mr. Cibber?" said Quin, whose jokes were not polished.
+
+"Jemmy, thou art a brute," was the reply.
+
+"You refuse, sir?" said Quin, sternly.
+
+"No, sir!" said Cibber, with dignity. "I accept."
+
+Pomander's eye was ever on the door.
+
+"The old are so unjust to the young," said he. "You pretend that the
+Deluge washed away iniquity, and that a rake is a fossil. What," said
+he, leaning as it were on every word, "if I bet you a cool hundred
+that Vane has a petticoat in that room, and that Mrs. Woffington shall
+unearth her?"
+
+The malicious dog thought this was the surest way to effect a dramatic
+exposure, because if Peggy found Mabel to all appearances concealed,
+Peggy would scold her, and betray herself.
+
+"Pomander!" cried Vane, in great heat; then, checking himself, he said
+coolly: "but you all know Pomander."
+
+"None of you," replied that gentleman. "Bring a chair, sir," said he,
+authoritatively, to a servant; who, of course, obeyed.
+
+Mrs. Clive looked at him, and thought: "There is something in this!"
+
+"It is for the lady," said he, coolly. Then, leaning over the table,
+he said to Mrs. Woffington, with an impudent affectation of friendly
+understanding: "I ran her to earth in this house not ten minutes ago.
+Of course I don't know who she is! But," smacking his lips, "a rustic
+Amaryllis, breathing all May-buds and Meadowsweet."
+
+"Have her out, Peggy!" shouted Cibber. "I know the run--there's the
+covert! Hark, forward! Ha, ha, ha!"
+
+Mr. Vane rose, and, with a sternness that brought the old beau up with
+a run, he said: "Mr. Cibber, age and infirmity are privileged; but for
+you, Sir Charles--"
+
+"Don't be angry," interposed Mrs. Woffington, whose terror was lest he
+should quarrel with so practiced a swordsman. "Don't you see it is a
+jest! and, as might be expected from poor Sir Charles, a very sorry one.
+
+"A jest!" said Vane, white with rage. "Let it go no further, or it will
+be earnest!"
+
+Mrs. Woffington placed her hand on his shoulder, and at that touch he
+instantly yielded, and sat down.
+
+It was at this moment, when Sir Charles found himself for the present
+baffled--for he could no longer press his point, and search that room;
+when the attention of all was drawn to a dispute, which, for a moment,
+had looked like a quarrel; while Mrs. Woffington's hand still lingered,
+as only a woman's hand can linger in leaving the shoulder of the man she
+loves; it was at this moment the door opened of its own accord, and a
+most beautiful woman stood, with a light step, upon the threshold!
+
+Nobody's back was to her, except Mr. Vane's. Every eye but his was
+spellbound upon her.
+
+Mrs. Woffington withdrew her hand, as if a scorpion had touched her.
+
+A stupor of astonishment fell on them all.
+
+Mr. Vane, seeing the direction of all their eyes, slewed himself round
+in his chair into a most awkward position, and when he saw the lady, he
+was utterly dumfounded! But she, as soon as he turned his face her way,
+glided up to him, with a little half-sigh, half-cry of joy, and taking
+him round the neck, kissed him deliciously, while every eye at the table
+met every other eye in turn. One or two of the men rose; for the lady's
+beauty was as worthy of homage as her appearing was marvelous.
+
+Mrs. Woffington, too astonished for emotion to take any definite shape,
+said, in what seemed an ordinary tone: "Who is this lady?"
+
+"I am his wife, madam," said Mabel, in the voice of a skylark, and
+smiling friendly on the questioner.
+
+"It is my wife!" said Vane, like a speaking-machine; he was scarcely in
+a conscious state. "It is my wife!" he repeated, mechanically.
+
+The words were no sooner out of Mabel's mouth than two servants, who had
+never heard of Mrs. Vane before, hastened to place on Mr. Vane's right
+hand the chair Pomander had provided, a plate and napkin were there in a
+twinkling, and the wife modestly, but as a matter of course, courtesied
+low, with an air of welcome to all her guests, and then glided into the
+seat her servants obsequiously placed before her.
+
+The whole thing did not take half a minute!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+MR. VANE, besides being a rich, was a magnificent man; when his features
+were in repose their beauty had a wise and stately character. Soaper and
+Snarl had admired and bitterly envied him. At the present moment no one
+of his guests envied him--they began to realize his position. And he, a
+huge wheel of shame and remorse, began to turn and whir before his
+eyes. He sat between two European beauties, and, pale and red by turns,
+shunned the eyes of both, and looked down at his plate in a cold sweat
+of humiliation, mortification and shame.
+
+The iron passed through Mrs. Woffington's soul. So! this was a villain,
+too, the greatest villain of all--a hypocrite! She turned very faint,
+but she was under an enemy's eye, and under a rival's; the thought
+drove the blood back from her heart, and with a mighty effort she was
+Woffington again. Hitherto her liaison with Mr. Vane had called up the
+better part of her nature, and perhaps our reader has been taking her
+for a good woman; but now all her dregs were stirred to the surface. The
+mortified actress gulled by a novice, the wronged and insulted woman,
+had but two thoughts; to defeat her rival--to be revenged on her false
+lover. More than one sharp spasm passed over her features before she
+could master them, and then she became smiles above, wormwood and
+red-hot steel below--all in less than half a minute.
+
+As for the others, looks of keen intelligence passed between them, and
+they watched with burning interest for the _denouement._ That interest
+was stronger than their sense of the comicality of all this (for the
+humorous view of what passes before our eyes comes upon cool reflection,
+not often at the time).
+
+Sir Charles, indeed, who had foreseen some of this, wore a demure look,
+belied by his glittering eye. He offered Cibber snuff, and the two
+satirical animals grinned over the snuff-box, like a malicious old ape
+and a mischievous young monkey.
+
+The newcomer was charming; she was above the middle height, of a
+full, though graceful figure, her abundant, glossy, bright brown hair
+glittered here and there like gold in the light; she had a snowy brow,
+eyes of the profoundest blue, a cheek like a peach, and a face beaming
+candor and goodness; the character of her countenance resembled "the
+Queen of the May," in Mr. Leslie's famous picture, more than any face of
+our day I can call to mind.
+
+"You are not angry with me for this silly trick?" said she, with some
+misgiving. "After all I am only two hours before my time; you know,
+dearest, I said four in my letter--did I not?"
+
+Vane stammered. What could he say?
+
+"And you have had three days to prepare you, for I wrote, like a good
+wife, to ask leave before starting; but he never so much as answered my
+letter, madam." (This she addressed to Mrs. Woffington, who smiled by
+main force.)
+
+"Why," stammered Vane, "could you doubt? I--I--"
+
+"No! Silence was consent, was it not? But I beg your pardon, ladies
+and gentlemen, I hope you will forgive me. It is six months since I saw
+him--so you understand--I warrant me you did not look for me so soon,
+ladies?"
+
+"Some of us did not look for you at all, madam," said Mrs. Woffington.
+
+"What, Ernest did not tell you he expected me?"
+
+"No! He told us this banquet was in honor of a lady's first visit to his
+house, but none of us imagined that lady to be his wife."
+
+Vane began to writhe under that terrible tongue, whose point hitherto
+had ever been turned away from him.
+
+"He intended to steal a march on us," said Pomander, dryly; "and, with
+your help, we steal one on him;" and he smiled maliciously on Mrs.
+Woffington.
+
+"But, madam," said Mr. Quin, "the moment you did arrive, I kept sacred
+for you a bit of the fat; for which, I am sure, you must be ready. Pass
+her plate!"
+
+"Not at present, Mr. Quin," said Mr. Vane, hastily. "She is about to
+retire and change her traveling-dress."
+
+"Yes, dear; but, you forget, I am a stranger to your friends. Will you
+not introduce me to them first?"
+
+"No, no!" cried Vane, in trepidation. "It is not usual to introduce in
+the _beau monde."_
+
+"We always introduce ourselves," rejoined Mrs. Woffington. She rose
+slowly, with her eye on Vane. He cast a look of abject entreaty on her;
+but there was no pity in that curling lip and awful eye. He closed his
+own eyes and waited for the blow. Sir Charles threw himself back in his
+chair, and, chuckling, prepared for the explosion. Mrs. Woffington saw
+him, and cast on him a look of ineffable scorn; and then she held the
+whole company fluttering a long while. At length: "The Honorable Mrs.
+Quickly, madam," said she, indicating Mrs. Clive.
+
+This turn took them all by surprise. Pomander bit his lip.
+
+"Sir John Brute--"
+
+"Falstaff," cried Quin; "hang it."
+
+"Sir John Brute Falstaff," resumed Mrs. Woffington. "We call him, for
+brevity, Brute."
+
+Vane drew a long breath. "Your neighbor is Lord Foppington; a butterfly
+of some standing, and a little gouty."
+
+"Sir Charles Pomander."
+
+"Oh," cried Mrs. Vane. "It is the good gentleman who helped us out
+of the slough, near Huntingdon. Ernest, if it had not been for this
+gentleman, I should not have had the pleasure of being here now." And
+she beamed on the good Pomander.
+
+Mr. Vane did not rise and embrace Sir Charles.
+
+"All the company thanks the good Sir Charles," said Cibber, bowing.
+
+"I see it in all their faces," said the good Sir Charles, dryly.
+
+Mrs. Woffington continued: "Mr. Soaper, Mr. Snarl; gentlemen who would
+butter and slice up their own fathers!"
+
+"Bless me!" cried Mrs. Vane, faintly.
+
+"Critics!" And she dropped, as it were, the word dryly, with a sweet
+smile, into Mabel's plate.
+
+Mrs. Vane was relieved; she had apprehended cannibals. London they had
+told her was full of curiosities.
+
+"But yourself, madam?"
+
+"I am the Lady Betty Modish; at your service."
+
+A four-inch grin went round the table. The dramatical old rascal,
+Cibber, began now to look at it as a bit of genteel comedy; and slipped
+out his note-book under the table. Pomander cursed her ready wit, which
+had disappointed him of his catastrophe. Vane wrote on a slip of paper:
+"Pity and respect the innocent!" and passed it to Mrs. Woffington. He
+could not have done a more superfluous or injudicious thing.
+
+"And now, Ernest," cried Mabel, "for the news from Willoughby."
+
+Vane stopped her in dismay. He felt how many satirical eyes and ears
+were upon him and his wife. "Pray go and change your dress first,
+Mabel," cried he, fully determined that on her return she should not
+find the present party there.
+
+Mrs. Vane cast an imploring look on Mrs. Woffington. "My things are not
+come," said she. "And, Lady Betty, I had so much to tell him, and to be
+sent away;" and the deep blue eyes began to fill.
+
+Now Mrs. Woffington was determined that this lady, who she saw was
+simple, should disgust her husband by talking twaddle before a band of
+satirists. So she said warmly: "It is not fair on us. Pray, madam, your
+budget of country news. Clouted cream so seldom comes to London quite
+fresh."
+
+"There, you see, Ernest," said the unsuspicious soul. "First, you must
+know that Gray Gillian is turned out for a brood mare, so old George
+won't let me ride her; old servants are such tyrants, my lady. And my
+Barbary hen has laid two eggs; Heaven knows the trouble we had to bring
+her to it. And Dame Best, that is my husband's old nurse, Mrs. Quickly,
+has had soup and pudding from the Hall everyday; and once she went so
+far as to say it wasn't altogether a bad pudding. She is not a very
+grateful woman, in a general way, poor thing! I made it with these
+hands."
+
+Vane writhed.
+
+"Happy pudding!" observed Mr. Cibber.
+
+"Is this mockery, sir?" cried Vane, with a sudden burst of irritation.
+
+"No, sir; it is gallantry," replied Cibber, with perfect coolness.
+
+"Will you hear a little music in the garden?" said Vane to Mrs.
+Woffington, pooh-poohing his wife's news.
+
+"Not till I hear the end of Dame Bess."
+
+"Best, my lady."
+
+"Dame Best interests _me,_ Mr. Vane."
+
+"Ay, and Ernest is very fond of her, too, when he is at home. She is in
+her nice new cottage, dear; but she misses the draughts that were in
+her old one--they were like old friends. 'The only ones I have, I'm
+thinking,' said the dear cross old thing; and there stood I, on her
+floor, with a flannel petticoat in both hands, that I had made for her,
+and ruined my finger. Look else, my Lord Foppington?" She extended a
+hand the color of cream.
+
+"Permit me, madam?" taking out his glasses, with which he inspected her
+finger; and gravely announced to the company: "The laceration is, in
+fact, discernible. May I be permitted, madam," added he, "to kiss this
+fair hand, which I should never have suspected of having ever made
+itself half so useful?"
+
+"Ay, my lord!" said she, coloring slightly, "you shall, because you are
+so old; but I don't say for a young gentleman, unless it was the one
+that belongs to me; and he does not ask me."
+
+"My dear Mabel; pray remember we are not at Willoughby."
+
+"I see we are not, Ernest." And the dove-like eyes filled brimful; and
+all her innocent prattle was put an end to.
+
+"What brutes men are," thought Mrs. Woffington. "They are not worthy
+even of a fool like this."
+
+Mr. Vane once more pressed her to hear a little music in the garden;
+and this time she consented. Mr. Vane was far from being unmoved by
+his wife's arrival, and her true affection. But she worried him; he
+was anxious, above all things, to escape from his present position, and
+separate the rival queens; and this was the only way he could see to do
+it. He whispered Mabel, and bade her somewhat peremptorily rest herself
+for an hour after her journey, and he entered the garden with Mrs.
+Woffington.
+
+Now the other gentlemen admired Mrs. Vane the most. She was new. She was
+as lovely, in her way, as Peggy; and it was the young May-morn beauty
+of the country. They forgave her simplicity, and even her goodness, on
+account of her beauty; men are not severe judges of beautiful women.
+They all solicited her to come with them, and be the queen of the
+garden. But the good wife was obedient. Her lord had told her she was
+fatigued; so she said she was tired.
+
+"Mr. Vane's garden will lack its sweetest and fairest flower, madam,"
+cried Cibber, "if we leave you here."
+
+"Nay, my lord, there are fairer than I."
+
+"Poor Quin!" cried Kitty Clive; "to have to leave the alderman's walk
+for the garden-walk."
+
+"All I regret," said the honest glutton, stoutly, "is that I go without
+carving for Mrs. Vane."
+
+"You are very good, Sir John; I will be more troublesome to you at
+supper-time."
+
+When they were all gone, she couldn't help sighing. It almost seemed as
+if everybody was kinder to her than he whose kindness alone she valued.
+"And he must take Lady Betty's hand instead of mine," thought she. "But
+that is good breeding, I suppose. I wish there was no such thing; we
+are very happy without it in Shropshire." Then this poor little soul was
+ashamed of herself, and took herself to task. "Poor Ernest," said she,
+pitying the wrongdoer, like a woman, "he was not pleased to be so taken
+by surprise. No wonder; they are so ceremonious in London. How good of
+him not to be angry!" Then she sighed; her heart had received a damp.
+His voice seemed changed, and he did not meet her eyes with the look he
+wore at Willoughby. She looked timidly into the garden. She saw the gay
+colors of beaux, as well as of belles--for in these days broadcloth had
+not displaced silk and velvet--glancing and shining among the trees; and
+she sighed, but, presently brightening up a little, she said: "I will go
+and see that the coffee is hot and clear, and the chocolate well mixed
+for them." The poor child wanted to do something to please her husband.
+Before she could carry out this act of domestic virtue, her attention
+was drawn to a strife of tongues in the hall. She opened the
+folding-doors, and there was a fine gentleman obstructing the entrance
+of a somber, rusty figure, with a portfolio and a manuscript under each
+arm.
+
+The fine gentleman was Colander. The seedy personage was the eternal
+Triplet, come to make hay with his five-foot rule while the sun shone.
+Colander had opened the door to him, and he had shot into the hall. The
+major-domo obstructed the farther entrance of such a coat.
+
+"I tell you my master is not at home," remonstrated the major-domo.
+
+"How can you say so," cried Mrs. Vane, in surprise, "when you know he is
+in the garden?"
+
+"Simpleton!" thought Colander.
+
+"Show the gentleman in."
+
+"Gentleman!" muttered Colander.
+
+Triplet thanked her for her condescension; he would wait for Mr. Vane in
+the hall. "I came by appointment, madam; this is the only excuse for the
+importunity you have just witnessed."
+
+Hearing this, Mrs. Vane dismissed Colander to inform his master.
+Colander bowed loftily, and walked into the servants' hall without
+deigning to take the last proposition into consideration.
+
+"Come in here, sir," said Mabel; "Mr. Vane will come as soon as he can
+leave his company." Triplet entered in a series of obsequious jerks.
+"Sit down and rest you, sir." And Mrs. Vane seated herself at the table,
+and motioned with her white hand to Triplet to sit beside her.
+
+Triplet bowed, and sat on the edge of a chair, and smirked and dropped
+his portfolio, and instantly begged Mrs. Vane's pardon; in taking it up,
+he let fall his manuscript, and was again confused; but in the middle
+of some superfluous and absurd excuse his eye fell on the haunch; it
+straightway dilated to an enormous size, and he became suddenly silent
+and absorbed in contemplation.
+
+"You look sadly tired, sir."
+
+"Why, yes, madam. It is a long way from Lambeth Walk, and it is passing
+hot, madam." He took his handkerchief out, and was about to wipe his
+brow, but returned it hastily to his pocket. "I beg your pardon, madam,"
+said Triplet, whose ideas of breeding, though speculative, were severe,
+"I forgot myself."
+
+Mabel looked at him, and colored, and slightly hesitated. At last she
+said: "I'll be bound you came in such a hurry you forgot--you mustn't be
+angry with me--to have your dinner first!"
+
+For Triplet looked like an absurd wolf--all benevolence and starvation!
+
+"What divine intelligence!" thought Trip. "How strange, madam," cried
+he, "you have hit it! This accounts, at once, for a craving I feel. Now
+you remind me, I recollect carving for others, I did forget to remember
+myself. Not that I need have forgot it to-day, madam; but, being used to
+forget it, I did not remember not to forget it to-day, madam, that was
+all." And the author of this intelligent account smiled very, very, very
+absurdly.
+
+She poured him out a glass of wine. He rose and bowed; but peremptorily
+refused it, with his tongue--his eye drank it.
+
+"But you must," persisted this hospitable lady.
+
+"But, madam, consider I am not entitled to--Nectar, as I am a man!"
+
+The white hand was filling his plate with partridge pie: "But, madam,
+you don't consider how you overwhelm me with your--Ambrosia, as I am a
+poet!"
+
+"I am sorry Mr. Vane should keep you waiting."
+
+"By no means, madam; it is fortunate--I mean, it procures me the
+pleasure of" (here articulation became obstructed) "your society, madam.
+Besides, the servants of the Muse are used to waiting. What we are not
+used to is" (here the white hand filled his glass) "being waited upon
+by Hebe and the Twelve Graces, whose health I have the honor
+"--(Deglutition).
+
+"A poet!" cried Mabel; "oh! I am so glad! Little did I think ever to see
+a living poet! Dear heart! I should not have known, if you had not told
+me. Sir, I love poetry!"
+
+"It is in your face, madam." Triplet instantly whipped out his
+manuscript, put a plate on one corner of it, and a decanter on the
+other, and begged her opinion of this trifle, composed, said he, "in
+honor of a lady Mr. Vane entertains to-day."
+
+"Oh!" said Mrs. Vane, and colored with pleasure. How ungrateful she had
+been! Here was an attention!--For, of course, she never doubted that the
+verses were in honor of her arrival.
+
+"'Bright being--'" sang out Triplet.
+
+"Nay, sir," said Mabel; "I think I know the lady, and it would be hardly
+proper of me--"
+
+"Oh, madam!" said Triplet, solemnly; "strictly correct, madam!" And
+he spread his hand out over his bosom. "Strictly!--'Blunderbuss' (my
+poetical name, madam) never stooped to the taste of the town.
+
+ 'Bright being, thou--'"
+
+"But you must have another glass of wine first, and a slice of the
+haunch."
+
+"With alacrity, madam." He laid in a fresh stock of provisions.
+
+Strange it was to see them side by side! _he,_ a Don Quixote, with
+cordage instead of lines in his mahogany face, and clothes hanging upon
+him; _she,_ smooth, duck-like, delicious, and bright as an opening rose
+fresh with dew!
+
+She watched him kindly, archly and demurely; and still plied him,
+countrywise, with every mortal thing on the table.
+
+But the poet was not a boa-constrictor, and even a boa-constrictor has
+an end. Hunger satisfied, his next strongest feeling, simple vanity,
+remained to be contented. As the last morsel went in out came:
+
+"'Bright being, thou whose ra--'"
+
+"No! no!" said she, who fancied herself (and not without reason) the
+bright being. "Mr. Vane intended them for a surprise."
+
+"As you please, madam;" and the disappointed bore sighed. "But you
+would have liked them, for the theme inspired me. The kindest, the most
+generous of women! Don't you agree with me, madam?"
+
+Mabel Vane opened her eyes. "Hardly, sir," laughed she.
+
+"If you knew her as I do."
+
+"I ought to know her better, sir."
+
+"Ay, indeed! Well, madam, now her kindness to me, for instance--a poor
+devil like me. The expression, I trust, is not disagreeable to you,
+madam? If so, forgive me, and consider it withdrawn."
+
+"La, sir! civility is so cheap, if you go to that."
+
+"Civility, ma'am? Why, she has saved me from despair--from starvation,
+perhaps."
+
+"Poor thing! Well, indeed, sir, you looked--you looked--what a shame!
+and you a poet."
+
+"From an epitaph to an epic, madam."
+
+At this moment a figure looked in upon them from the garden, but
+retreated unobserved. It was Sir Charles Pomander, who had slipped away,
+with the heartless and malicious intention of exposing the husband to
+the wife, and profiting by her indignation and despair. Seeing Triplet,
+he made an extemporaneous calculation that so infernal a chatterbox
+could not be ten minutes in her company without telling her everything,
+and this would serve his turn very well. He therefore postponed his
+purpose, and strolled away to a short distance.
+
+Triplet justified the baronet's opinion. Without any sort of sequency
+he now informed Mrs. Vane that the benevolent lady was to sit to him for
+her portrait.
+
+Here was a new attention of Ernest's. How good he was, and how wicked
+and ungrateful she!
+
+"What! are you a painter too?" she inquired.
+
+"From a house front to an historical composition, madam."
+
+"Oh, what a clever man! And so Ernest commissioned you to paint a
+portrait?"
+
+"No, madam; for that I am indebted to the lady herself."
+
+"The lady herself?"
+
+"Yes, madam; and I expected to find her here. Will you add to your
+kindness by informing me whether she has arrived? Or she is gone--"
+
+"Who, sir? (Oh, dear! not my portrait! Oh, Ernest!)"
+
+"Who, madam!" cried Triplet; "why, Mrs. Woffington!"
+
+"She is not here," said Mrs. Vane, who remembered all the names
+perfectly well. "There is one charming lady among our guests, her
+face took me in a moment; but she is a titled lady. There is no Mrs.
+Woffington among them."
+
+"Strange!" replied Triplet; "she was to be here; and, in fact, that is
+why I expedited these lines in her honor."
+
+"In _her_ honor, sir?"
+
+"Yes, madam. Allow me:
+
+ 'Brights being, thou whose radiant brow--'"
+
+"No! no! I don't care to hear them now, for I don't know the lady."
+
+"Well, madam, but at least you have seen her act?"
+
+"Act! you don't mean all this is for an actress?"
+
+_"An_ actress? _The_ actress! And you have never seen her act? What a
+pleasure you have to come! To see her act is a privilege; but to act
+with her, as _I_ once did! But she does not remember that, nor shall
+I remind her, madam," said Triplet sternly. "On that occasion I was
+hissed, owing to circumstances which, for the credit of our common
+nature, I suppress."
+
+"What! are you an actor too? You are everything."
+
+"And it was in a farce of my own, madam, which, by the strangest
+combination of accidents, was damned!"
+
+"A play-writer? Oh, what clever men there are in the world--in London,
+at least! He is a play-writer, too. I wonder my husband comes not. Does
+Mr. Vane--does Mr. Vane admire this actress?" said she, suddenly.
+
+"Mr. Vane, madam, is a gentleman of taste," said he, pompously.
+
+"Well, sir," said the lady, languidly, "she is not here." Triplet took
+the hint and rose. "Good-by," said she, sweetly; and thank you kindly
+for your company.
+
+"Triplet, madam--James Triplet, of 10, Hercules Buildings, Lambeth.
+Occasional verses, odes, epithalamia, elegies, dedications, squibs,
+impromptus and hymns executed with spirit, punctuality and secrecy.
+Portraits painted, and instruction in declamation, sacred, profane and
+dramatic. The card, madam" (and he drew it as doth a theatrical fop
+his rapier) "of him who, to all these qualifications adds a prouder
+still--that of being,
+
+"Madam,
+
+"Your humble, devoted and grateful servant,
+
+"JAMES TRIPLET."
+
+
+He bowed in a line from his right shoulder to his left toe, and moved
+off. But Triplet could not go all at one time out of such company; he
+was given to return in real life, he had played this trick so often on
+the stage. He came back, exuberant with gratitude.
+
+"The fact is, madam," said he, "strange as it may appear to you, a kind
+hand has not so often been held out to me, that I should forget it,
+especially when that hand is so fair and gracious. May I be permitted,
+madam--you will impute it to gratitude rather than audacity--I--I--"
+(whimper), "madam" (with sudden severity), "I am gone!"
+
+These last words he pronounced with the right arm at an angle of
+forty-five degrees, and the fingers pointing horizontally. The stage had
+taught him this grace also. In his day, an actor who had three words to
+say, such as, "My lord's carriage is waiting," came on the stage with
+the right arm thus elevated, delivered his message in the tones of a
+falling dynasty, wheeled like a soldier, and retired with the left
+arm pointing to the sky and the right hand extended behind him like a
+setter's tail.
+
+Left to herself, Mabel was uneasy. "Ernest is so warm-hearted." This was
+the way she put it even to herself. He admired her acting and wished to
+pay her a compliment. "What if I carried him the verses?" She thought
+she should surely please him by showing she was not the least jealous
+or doubtful of him. The poor child wanted so to win a kind look from
+her husband; but ere she could reach the window Sir Charles Pomander had
+entered it.
+
+Now Sir Charles was naturally welcome to Mrs. Vane; for all she knew of
+him was, that he had helped her on the road to her husband.
+
+_Pomander._ "What, madam! all alone here as in Shropshire?"
+
+_Mabel._ "For the moment, sir."
+
+_Pomander._ "Force of habit. A husband with a wife in Shropshire is so
+like a bachelor."
+
+_Mabel._ "Sir!"
+
+_Pomander._ "And our excellent Ernest is such a favorite!"
+
+_Mabel._ "No wonder, sir!"
+
+_Pomander._ "Few can so pass from the larva state of country squire to
+the butterfly nature of beau."
+
+_Mabel._ "Yes" (sadly), "I find him changed."
+
+_Pomander._ "Changed! Transformed. He is now the prop of the
+'Cocoa-Tree,' the star of Ranelagh, the Lauzun of the green-room."
+
+_Mabel._ "The green-room! Where is that? You mean kindly, sir; but you
+make me unhappy."
+
+_Pomander._ "The green-room, my dear madam, is the bower where houris
+put off their wings, and goddesses become dowdies; where Lady Macbeth
+weeps over her lap-dog, dead from repletion; and Belvidera soothes her
+broken heart with a dozen of oysters. In a word, it is the place where
+actors and actresses become men and women, and act their own parts with
+skill, instead of a poet's clumsily."
+
+_Mabel._ "Actors! actresses! Does Mr. Vane frequent such--"
+
+_Pomander._ "He has earned in six months a reputation many a fine
+gentleman would give his ears for. Not a scandalous journal his initials
+have not figured in; not an actress of reputation gossip has not given
+him for a conquest."
+
+"How dare you say this to me?" cried Mrs. Vane, with a sudden flash of
+indignation, and then the tears streamed over her lovely cheeks; and
+even a Pomander might have forborne to torture her so; but Sir Charles
+had no mercy.
+
+"You would be sure to learn it," said he; "and with malicious additions.
+It is better to hear the truth from a friend."
+
+"A friend? He is no friend to a house who calumniates the husband to the
+wife. Is it the part of a friend to distort dear Ernest's kindliness and
+gayety into ill morals; to pervert his love of poetry and plays into an
+unworthy attachment to actors and--oh!" and the tears would come. But
+she dried them, for now she hated this man; with all the little power
+of hatred she had, she detested him. "Do you suppose I did not know Mrs.
+Woffington was to come to us to-day?" cried she, struggling passionately
+against her own fears and Sir Charles's innuendoes.
+
+"What!" cried he; "you recognized her? You detected the actress of all
+work under the airs of Lady Betty Modish?"
+
+"Lady Betty Modish!" cried Mabel. "That good, beautiful face!"
+
+"Ah!" cried Sir Charles, "I see you did not. Well, Lady Betty was Mrs.
+Woffington!"
+
+"Whom my husband, I know, had invited here to present her with these
+verses, which I shall take him for her;" and her poor little lip
+trembled. "Had the visit been in any other character, as you are so
+base, so cruel as to insinuate (what have I done to you that you kill me
+so, you wicked gentleman?), would he have chosen the day of my arrival?"
+
+"Not if he knew you were coming," was the cool reply.
+
+"And he did know--I wrote to him."
+
+"Indeed!" said Pomander, fairly puzzled.
+
+Mrs. Vane caught sight of her handwriting on the tray, and darted to it,
+and seized her letter, and said, triumphantly:
+
+"My last letter, written upon the road--see!"
+
+Sir Charles took it with surprise, but, turning it in his hand, a cool,
+satirical smile came to his face. He handed it back, and said, coldly:
+
+"Read me the passage, madam, on which you argue."
+
+Poor Mrs. Vane turned the letter in her hand, and her eye became
+instantly glazed; the seal was unbroken! She gave a sharp cry of agony,
+like a wounded deer. She saw Pomander no longer; she was alone with her
+great anguish. "I had but my husband and my God in the world," cried
+she. "My mother is gone. My God, have pity on me! my husband does not
+love me."
+
+The cold villain was startled at the mighty storm his mean hand had
+raised. This creature had not only more feeling, but more passion, than
+a hundred libertines. He muttered some villain's commonplaces; while
+this unhappy young lady raised her hands to heaven, and sobbed in a way
+very terrible to any manly heart.
+
+"He is unworthy you," muttered Pomander. "He has forfeited your love. He
+has left you nothing but revenge. Be comforted. Let me, who have learned
+already to adore you--"
+
+"So," cried she, turning on him in a moment (for, on some points,
+woman's instinct is the lightning of wisdom), "this, sir, was your
+object? I may no longer hold a place in my husband's heart; but I am
+mistress of his house. Leave it, sir! and never return to it while I
+live."
+
+Sir Charles, again discomfited, bowed reverentially. "Your wish shall
+ever be respected by me, madam! But here they come. Use the right of a
+wife. Conceal yourself in that high chair. See, I turn it; so that they
+cannot see you. At least you will find I have but told you the truth."
+
+"No!" cried Mabel, violently. "I will not spy upon my husband at the
+dictation of his treacherous friend."
+
+Sir Charles vanished. He was no sooner gone than Mrs. Vane crouched,
+trembling, and writhing with jealousy, in the large, high-backed chair.
+She heard her husband and the _soi-disant_ Lady Betty Modish enter.
+During their absence, Mrs. Woffington had doubtless been playing her
+cards with art; for it appeared that a reconciliation was now taking
+place. The lady, however, was still cool and distant. It was poor
+Mabel's fate to hear these words: "You must permit me to go alone, Mr.
+Vane. I insist upon leaving this house alone."
+
+On this, he whispered to her.
+
+She answered: "You are not justified."
+
+"I can explain all," was his reply. "I am ready to renounce credit,
+character, all the world for you."
+
+They passed out of the room before the unhappy listener could recover
+the numbing influence of these deadly words.
+
+But the next moment she started wildly up, and cried as one drowning
+cries vaguely for help: "Ernest! oh, no--no! you cannot use me so!
+Ernest--husband! Oh, mother! mother!"
+
+She rose, and would have made for the door, but nature had been too
+cruelly tried. At the first step she could no longer see anything; and
+the next moment, swooning dead away, she fell back insensible, with her
+head and shoulders resting on the chair.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+MR. VANE was putting Mrs. Woffington into her chair, when he thought he
+heard his name cried. He bade that lady a mournful farewell, and stepped
+back into his own hall. He had no sooner done so than he heard a voice,
+the accent of which alarmed him, though he distinguished no word. He
+hastily crossed the hall and flew into the banquet-room. Coming rapidly
+in at the folding-doors he almost fell over his wife, lying insensible
+half upon the floor and half upon the chair. When he saw her pale and
+motionless, a terrible misgiving seized him; he fell on his knees.
+
+"Mabel, Mabel!" cried he, "my love! my innocent wife! Oh, God! what have
+I done? Perhaps it is the fatigue--perhaps she has fainted."
+
+"No, it is not the fatigue!" screamed a voice near him. It was old James
+Burdock, who, with his white hair streaming and his eye gleaming with
+fire, shook his fist in his master's face--"no, it is not the fatigue,
+you villain! It is you who have killed her, with your jezebels and
+harlots, you scoundrel!"
+
+"Send the women here, James, for God's sake!" cried Mr. Vane, not
+even noticing the insult he had received from a servant. He stamped
+furiously, and cried for help. The whole household was round her in a
+moment. They carried her to bed.
+
+The remorse-stricken man, his own knees trembling under him, flew, in an
+agony of fear and self-reproach, for a doctor!
+
+_A doctor?_
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+DURING the garden scene, Mr. Vane had begged Mrs. Woffington to let him
+accompany her. She peremptorily refused, and said in the same breath
+she was going to Triplet, in Hercules Buildings, to have her portrait
+finished.
+
+Had Mr. Vane understood the sex, he would not have interpreted her
+refusal to the letter; when there was a postscript, the meaning of which
+was so little enigmatical.
+
+Some three hours after the scene we have described, Mrs. Woffington sat
+in Triplet's apartment; and Triplet, palette in hand, painted away upon
+her portrait.
+
+Mrs. Woffington was in that languid state which comes to women after
+their hearts have received a blow. She felt as if life was ended, and
+but the dregs of existence remained; but at times a flood of bitterness
+rolled over her, and she resigned all hope of perfect happiness in this
+world--all hope of loving and respecting the same creature; and at these
+moments she had but one idea--to use her own power, and bind her lover
+to her by chains never to be broken; and to close her eyes, and glide
+down the precipice of the future.
+
+"I think you are master of this art," said she, very languidly, to
+Triplet, "you paint so rapidly."
+
+"Yes, madam," said Triplet, gloomily; and painted on. "Confound this
+shadow!" added he; and painted on.
+
+His soul, too, was clouded. Mrs. Woffington, yawning in his face, had
+told him she had invited all Mr. Vane's company to come and praise his
+work; and ever since that he had been _morne et silencieux._
+
+"You are fortunate," continued Mrs. Woffington, not caring what she
+said; "it is so difficult to make execution keep pace with conception."
+
+"Yes, ma'am;" and he painted on.
+
+"You are satisfied with it?"
+
+"Anything but, ma'am;" and he painted on.
+
+"Cheerful soul!--then I presume it is like?"
+
+"Not a bit, ma'am;" and he painted on.
+
+Mrs. Woffington stretched.
+
+"You can't yawn, ma'am--you can't yawn."
+
+"Oh, yes, I can. You are such good company;" and she stretched again.
+
+"I was just about to catch the turn of the lip," remonstrated Triplet.
+
+"Well, catch it--it won't run away."
+
+"I'll try, ma'am. A pleasant half-hour it will be for me, when they all
+come here like cits at a shilling ordinary--each for his cut."
+
+"At a sensitive goose!"
+
+"That is as may be, madam. Those critics flay us alive!"
+
+"You should not hold so many doors open to censure."
+
+"No, ma'am. Head a little more that way. I suppose you _can't_ sit
+quiet, ma'am?--then never mind!" (This resignation was intended as a
+stinging reproach.) "Mr. Cibber, with his sneering snuff-box! Mr. Quin,
+with his humorous bludgeon! Mrs. Clive, with her tongue! Mr. Snarl, with
+his abuse! And Mr. Soaper, with his praise!--arsenic in treacle I call
+it! But there, I deserve it all! For look on this picture, and on this!"
+
+"Meaning, I am painted as well as my picture!"
+
+"Oh, no, no, no! But to turn from your face, madam--on which the
+lightning of expression plays, continually--to this stony, detestable,
+dead daub!--I could--And I will, too! Imposture! dead caricature of
+life and beauty, take that!" and he dashed his palette-knife through the
+canvas. "Libelous lie against nature and Mrs. Woffington, take that!"
+and he stabbed the canvas again; then, with sudden humility: "I beg your
+pardon, ma'am," said he, "for this apparent outrage, which I trust you
+will set down to the excitement attendant upon failure. The fact is, I
+am an incapable ass, and no painter! Others have often hinted as much;
+but I never observed it myself till now!"
+
+"Right through my pet dimple!" said Mrs. Woffington, with perfect
+_nonchalance._ "Well, now I suppose I may yawn, or do what I like?"
+
+"You may, madam," said Triplet, gravely. "I have forfeited what little
+control I had over you, madam."
+
+So they sat opposite each other, in mournful silence. At length the
+actress suddenly rose. She struggled fiercely against her depression,
+and vowed that melancholy should not benumb her spirits and her power.
+
+"He ought to have been here by this time," said she to herself. "Well, I
+will not mope for him. I must do something. Triplet," said she.
+
+"Madam."
+
+"Nothing."
+
+"No, madam."
+
+She sat gently down again, and leaned her head on her hand, and thought.
+She was beautiful as she thought!--her body seemed bristling with
+mind! At last, her thoughtful gravity was illumined by a smile. She had
+thought out something _excogitaverat._
+
+"Triplet, the picture is quite ruined!"
+
+"Yes, madam. And a coach-load of criticism coming!"
+
+"Triplet, we actors and actresses have often bright ideas."
+
+"Yes, ma am."
+
+"When we take other people's!"
+
+"He, he!" went Triplet. "Those are our best, madam!"
+
+"Well, sir, I have got a bright idea."
+
+"You don't say so, ma'am!"
+
+"Don't be a brute, dear!" said the lady gravely.
+
+Triplet stared!
+
+"When I was in France, taking lessons of Dumesnil, one of the actors of
+the Theatre Francais had his portrait painted by a rising artist. The
+others were to come and see it. They determined, beforehand, to mortify
+the painter and the sitter, by abusing the work in good set terms. But
+somehow this got wind, and the patients resolved to be the physicians.
+They put their heads together, and contrived that the living face should
+be in the canvas, surrounded by the accessories; these, of course, were
+painted. Enter the actors, who played their little prearranged farce;
+and, when they had each given the picture a slap, the picture rose and
+laughed in their faces, and discomfited them! By the by, the painter
+did not stop there; he was not content with a short laugh, he laughed at
+them five hundred years!"
+
+"Good gracious, Mrs. Woffington!"
+
+"He painted a picture of the whole thing; and as his work is immortal,
+ours an April snow-flake, he has got tremendously the better of those
+rash little satirists. Well, Trip, what is sauce for the gander is sauce
+for the goose; so give me the sharpest knife in the house."
+
+Triplet gave her a knife, and looked confused, while she cut away the
+face of the picture, and by dint of scraping, cutting, and measuring,
+got her face two parts through the canvas. She then made him take his
+brush and paint all round her face, so that the transition might not be
+too abrupt. Several yards of green baize were also produced. This was to
+be disposed behind the easel, so as to conceal her.
+
+Triplet painted here, and touched and retouched there. While thus
+occupied, he said, in his calm, resigned way: "It won't do, madam. I
+suppose you know that?"
+
+"I know nothing," was the reply: "life is a guess. I don't think we
+could deceive Roxalana and Lucy this way, because their eyes are
+without colored spectacles; but, when people have once begun to see by
+prejudices and judge by jargon what can't be done with them? Who knows?
+do you? I don't; so let us try."
+
+"I beg your pardon, madam; my brush touched your face."
+
+"No offense, sir; I am used to that. And I beg, if you can't tone the
+rest of the picture up to me, that you will instantly tone me down to
+the rest. Let us be in tune, whatever it costs, sir."
+
+"I will avail myself of the privilege, madam, but sparingly. Failure,
+which is certain, madam, will cover us with disgrace."
+
+"Nothing is certain in this life, sir, except that you are a goose.
+It succeeded in France; and England can match all Europe for fools.
+Besides, it will be well done. They say Davy Garrick can turn his eyes
+into bottled gooseberries. Well, Peg Woffington will turn hers into
+black currants. Haven't you done? I wonder they have not come. Make
+haste!"
+
+"They will know by its beauty I never did it."
+
+"That is a sensible remark, Trip. But I think they will rather argue
+backward; that, as you did it, it cannot be beautiful, and so cannot be
+me. Your reputation will be our shield."
+
+"Well, madam, now you mention it, they are like enough to take that
+ground. They despise all I do; if they did not--"
+
+"You would despise them."
+
+At this moment the pair were startled by the sound of a coach. Triplet
+turned as pale as ashes. Mrs. Woffington had her misgivings; but, not
+choosing to increase the difficulty, she would not let Triplet, whose
+self-possession she doubted, see any sign of emotion in her.
+
+"Lock the door," said she, firmly, "and don't be silly. Now hold up my
+green baize petticoat, and let me be in a half-light. Now put that table
+and those chairs before me, so that they can't come right up to me; and,
+Triplet, don't let them come within six yards, if you can help it. Say
+it is unfinished, and so must be seen from a focus."
+
+"A focus! I don't know what you mean."
+
+"No more do I; no more will they, perhaps; and if they don't they will
+swallow it directly. Unlock the door. Are they coming?"
+
+"They are only at the first stair."
+
+"Mr. Triplet, your face is a book, where one may read strange matters.
+For Heaven's sake, compose yourself. Let all the risk lie in one
+countenance. Look at me, sir. Make your face like the Book of Daniel in
+a Jew's back parlor. Volto Sciolto is your cue."
+
+"Madam, madam, how your tongue goes! I hear them on the stairs. Pray
+don't speak!"
+
+"Do you know what we are going to do?" continued the tormenting Peggy.
+"We are going to weigh goose's feathers! to criticise criticism, Trip--"
+
+"Hush! hush!"
+
+A grampus was heard outside the door, and Triplet opened it. There was
+Quin leading the band.
+
+"Have a care, sir," cried Triplet; "there is a hiatus the third step
+from the door."
+
+"A _gradus ad Parnassum_ a wanting," said Mr. Cibber.
+
+Triplet's heart sank. The hole had been there six months, and he had
+found nothing witty to say about it, and at first sight Mr. Cibber had
+done its business. And on such men he and his portrait were to attempt
+a preposterous delusion. Then there was Snarl, who wrote critiques on
+painting, and guided the national taste. The unlucky exhibitor was in a
+cold sweat. He led the way, like a thief going to the gallows.
+
+"The picture being unfinished, gentlemen," said he, "must, if you would
+do me justice, be seen from a--a focus; must be judged from here, I
+mean."
+
+"Where, sir?" said Mr. Cibber.
+
+"About here, sir, if you please," said poor Triplet faintly.
+
+"It looks like a finished picture from here," said Mrs. Clive.
+
+"Yes, madam," groaned Triplet.
+
+They all took up a position, and Triplet timidly raised his eyes along
+with the rest. He was a little surprised. The actress had flattened
+her face! She had done all that could be done, and more than he had
+conceived possible, in the way of extracting life and the atmosphere of
+expression from her countenance. She was "dead still!"
+
+There was a pause. Triplet fluttered. At last some of them spoke as
+follows:
+
+_Soaper._ "Ah!"
+
+_Quin._ "Ho!"
+
+_Clive._ "Eh!"
+
+_Cibber._ "Humph!"
+
+These interjections are small on paper, but as the good creatures
+uttered them they were eloquent; there was a cheerful variety of
+dispraise skillfully thrown into each of them.
+
+"Well," continued Soaper, with his everlasting smile.
+
+Then the fun began.
+
+"May I be permitted to ask whose portrait this is?" said Mr. Cibber
+slyly.
+
+"I distinctly told you, it was to be Peg Woffington's," said Mrs. Clive.
+"I think you might take my word."
+
+"Do you act as truly as you paint?" said Quin.
+
+"Your fame runs no risk from me, sir!" replied Triplet.
+
+"It is not like Peggy's beauty! Eh?" rejoined Quin.
+
+"I can't agree with you," cried Kitty Clive. "I think it a very pretty
+face; and not at all like Peg Woffington's."
+
+"Compare paint with paint," said Quin. "Are you sure you ever saw down
+to Peggy's real face?"
+
+Triplet had seen with alarm that Mr. Snarl spoke not; many satirical
+expressions crossed his face, but he said nothing. Triplet gathered from
+this that he had at once detected the trick. "Ah!" thought Triplet, "he
+means to quiz them, as well as expose me. He is hanging back; and, in
+point of fact, a mighty satirist like Snarl would naturally choose to
+quiz six people rather than two."
+
+"Now I call it beautiful!" said the traitor Soaper. "So calm and
+reposeful; no particular expression."
+
+"None whatever," said Snarl.
+
+"Gentlemen," said Triplet, "does it never occur to you that the fine
+arts are tender violets, and cannot blow when the north winds--"
+
+"Blow!" inserted Quin.
+
+"Are so cursed cutting?" continued Triplet.
+
+"My good sir, I am never cutting!" smirked Soaper. "My dear Snarl,"
+whined he, "give us the benefit of your practiced judgment. Do justice
+to this ad-mirable work of art," drawled the traitor.
+
+"I will!" said Mr. Snarl; and placed himself before the picture.
+
+"What on earth will he say?" thought Triplet. "I can see by his face he
+has found us out."
+
+Mr. Snarl delivered a short critique. Mr. Snarl's intelligence was
+not confined to his phrases; all critics use intelligent phrases and
+philosophical truths. But this gentleman's manner was very intelligent;
+it was pleasant, quiet, assured, and very convincing. Had the reader or
+I been there, he would have carried us with him, as he did his hearers;
+and as his successors carry the public with them now.
+
+"Your brush is by no means destitute of talent, Mr. Triplet," said
+Mr. Snarl. "But you are somewhat deficient, at present, in the great
+principles of your art; the first of which is a loyal adherence to
+truth. Beauty itself is but one of the forms of truth, and nature is our
+finite exponent of infinite truth."
+
+His auditors gave him a marked attention. They could not but acknowledge
+that men who go to the bottom of things like this should be the best
+instructors.
+
+"Now, in nature, a woman's face at this distance--ay, even at this short
+distance--melts into the air. There is none of that sharpness; but, on
+the contrary, a softness of outline." He made a lorgnette of his two
+hands; the others did so too, and found they saw much better--oh, ever
+so much better! "Whereas yours," resumed Snarl, "is hard; and, forgive
+me, rather tea-board like. Then your _chiaro scuro,_ my good sir, is
+very defective; for instance, in nature, the nose, intercepting the
+light on one side the face, throws, of necessity, a shadow under the
+eye. Caravaggio, Venetians generally, and the Bolognese masters, do
+particular justice to this. No such shade appears in this portrait."
+
+"'Tis so, stop my vitals!" observed Colley Cibber. And they all looked,
+and, having looked, wagged their heads in assent--as the fat, white
+lords at Christie's waggle fifty pounds more out for a copy of
+Rembrandt, a brown levitical Dutchman, visible in the pitch-dark by some
+sleight of sun Newton had not wit to discover.
+
+Soaper dissented from the mass.
+
+"But, my dear Snarl, if there are no shades, there are lights, loads of
+lights."
+
+"There are," replied Snarl; "only they are impossible, that is all.
+You have, however," concluded he, with a manner slightly supercilious,
+"succeeded in the mechanical parts; the hair and the dress are well, Mr.
+Triplet; but your Woffington is not a woman, not nature."
+
+They all nodded and waggled assent; but this sagacious motion was
+arrested as by an earthquake.
+
+The picture rang out, in the voice of a clarion, an answer that outlived
+the speaker: "She's a woman! for she has taken four men in! She's
+nature! for a fluent dunce doesn't know her when he sees her!"
+
+Imagine the tableau! It was charming! Such opening of eyes and mouths!
+Cibber fell by second nature into an attitude of the old comedy. And all
+were rooted where they stood, with surprise and incipient mortification,
+except Quin, who slapped his knee, and took the trick at its value.
+
+Peg Woffington slipped out of the green baize, and, coming round from
+the back of the late picture, stood in person before them; while they
+looked alternately at her and at the hole in the canvas. She then came
+at each of them in turn, _more dramatico._
+
+"A pretty face, and not like Woffington. I owe you two, Kate Clive."
+
+"Who ever saw Peggy's real face? Look at it now if you can without
+blushing, Mr. Quin."
+
+Quin, a good-humored fellow, took the wisest view of his predicament,
+and burst into a hearty laugh.
+
+"For all this," said Mr. Snarl, peevishly, "I maintain, upon the
+unalterable principles of art--" At this they all burst into a roar,
+not sorry to shift the ridicule. "Goths!" cried Snarl, fiercely.
+"Good-morning, ladies and gentlemen," cried Mr. Snarl, _avec intention,_
+"I have a criticism to write of last night's performance." The laugh
+died away to a quaver. "I shall sit on your pictures one day, Mr.
+Brush."
+
+"Don't sit on them with your head downward, or you'll addle them," said
+Mr. Brush, fiercely. This was the first time Triplet had ever answered
+a foe. Mrs. Woffington gave him an eloquent glance of encouragement. He
+nodded his head in infantine exultation at what he had done.
+
+"Come, Soaper," said Mr. Snarl.
+
+Mr. Soaper lingered one moment to say: "You shall always have my good
+word, Mr. Triplet."
+
+"I will try--and not deserve it, Mr. Soaper," was the prompt reply.
+
+"Serve 'em right," said Mr. Cibber, as soon as the door had closed upon
+them; "for a couple of serpents, or rather one boa-constrictor. Soaper
+slavers, for Snarl to crush. But we were all a little too hard on
+Triplet here; and, if he will accept my apology--"
+
+"Why, sir," said Triplet, half trembling, but driven on by looks from
+Mrs. Woffington, "'Cibber's Apology' is found to be a trifle wearisome."
+
+"Confound his impertinence!" cried the astounded laureate. "Come along,
+Jemmy."
+
+"Oh, sir," said Quin, good-humoredly, "we must give a joke and take a
+joke. And when he paints my portrait--which he shall do--"
+
+"The bear from Hockley Hole shall sit for the head!"
+
+"Curse his impudence!" roared Quin. "I'm at your service, Mr. Cibber,"
+added he, in huge dudgeon.
+
+Away went the two old boys.
+
+"Mighty well!" said waspish Mrs. Clive. "I did intend you should have
+painted Mrs. Clive. But after this impertinence--"
+
+"You will continue to do it yourself, ma'am!"
+
+This was Triplet's hour of triumph. His exultation was undignified,
+and such as is said to precede a fall. He inquired gravely of Mrs.
+Woffington, whether he had or had not shown a spirit. Whether he had or
+had not fired into each a parting shot, as they sheered off. To repair
+which, it might be advisable for them to put into friendly ports.
+
+"Tremendous!" was the reply. "And when Snarl and Soaper sit on your next
+play, they won't forget the lesson you have given them."
+
+"I'll be sworn they won't!" chuckled Triplet. But, reconsidering her
+words, he looked blank, and muttered: "Then perhaps it would have been
+more prudent to let them alone!"
+
+"Incalculably more prudent!" was the reply.
+
+"Then why did you set me on, madam?" said Triplet, reproachfully.
+
+"Because I wanted amusement, and my head ached," was the cool answer,
+somewhat languidly given.
+
+"I defy the coxcombs!" cried Triplet, with reviving spirit. "But real
+criticism I respect, honor, and bow to. Such as yours, madam; or such as
+that sweet lady's at Mr. Vane's would have been; or, in fact, anybody's
+who appreciates me. Oh, madam, I wanted to ask you, was it not strange
+your not being at Mr. Vane's, after all, to-day?"
+
+"I was at Mr. Vane's, Triplet."
+
+"You were? Why, I came with my verses, and she said you were not there!
+I will go fetch the verses."
+
+"No, no! Who said I was not there?"
+
+"Did I not tell you? The charming young lady who helped me with her own
+hand to everything on the table. What wine that gentleman possesses!"
+
+"Was it a young lady, Triplet?"
+
+"Not more than two-and-twenty, I should say.
+
+"In a traveling-dress?"
+
+"I could not see her dress, madam, for her beauty--brown hair, blue
+eyes, charming in conversation--"
+
+"Ah! What did she tell you?"
+
+"She told me, madam--Ahem!"
+
+"Well, what did you tell her? And what did she answer?"
+
+"I told her that I came with verses for you, ordered by Mr. Vane. That
+he admired you. I descanted, madam, on your virtues, which had made him
+your slave."
+
+"Go on," said Mrs. Woffington, encouraging him with a deceitful smile.
+"Tell me all you told her."
+
+"That you were sitting to me for your portrait, the destination of which
+was not doubtful. That I lived at 10, Hercules Buildings."
+
+"You told that lady all this?"
+
+"I give my honor. She was so kind, I opened my heart to her. But tell
+me now, madam," said Triplet, joyously dancing round the Woffington
+volcano, "do you know this charming lady?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I congratulate you, madam. An acquaintance worthy even of you; and
+there are not many such. Who is she, madam?" continued Triplet, lively
+with curiosity.
+
+"Mrs. Vane," was the quiet, grim answer.
+
+"Mrs. Vane? His mother? No--am I mad? His sister! Oh, I see, his--"
+
+"His wife!"
+
+"His wife! Why, then, Mr. Vane's married?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Oh, look there!--Oh, look here now! Well, but, good Heavens! she wasn't
+to know you were there, perhaps?"
+
+"No."
+
+"But then I let the cat out of the bag?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"But, good gracious! there will be some serious mischief!"
+
+"No doubt of it."
+
+"And it is all my fault?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I've played the deuce with their married happiness?"
+
+"Probably."
+
+"And ten to one if you are not incensed against me too?"
+
+Mrs. Woffington replied by looking him in the face, and turning her back
+upon him. She walked hastily to the window, threw it open, and looked
+out of it, leaving poor Triplet to very unpleasant reflections. She was
+so angry with him she dared not trust herself to speak.
+
+"Just my luck," thought he. "I had a patron and a benefactress; I have
+betrayed them both." Suddenly an idea struck him. "Madam," said he,
+timorously, "see what these fine gentlemen are! What business had he,
+with a wife at home, to come and fall in love with you? I do it forever
+in my plays--I am obliged--they would be so dull else; but in _real_
+life to do it is abominable."
+
+"You forget, sir," replied Mrs. Woffington, without moving, "that I
+am an actress--a plaything for the impertinence of puppies and the
+treachery of hypocrites. Fool! to think there was an honest man in the
+world, and that he had shone on me!"
+
+With these words she turned, and Triplet was shocked to see the change
+in her face. She was pale, and her black, lowering brows were gloomy and
+terrible. She walked like a tigress to and fro, and Triplet dared not
+speak to her. Indeed she seemed but half conscious of his presence. He
+went for nobody with her. How little we know the people we eat and go to
+church and flirt with! Triplet had imagined this creature an incarnation
+of gayety, a sportive being, the daughter of smiles, the bride of mirth;
+needed but a look at her now to see that her heart was a volcano, her
+bosom a boiling gulf of fiery lava. She walked like some wild creature;
+she flung her hands up to heaven with a passionate despair, before
+which the feeble spirit of her companion shrank and cowered; and, with
+quivering lips and blazing eyes, she burst into a torrent of passionate
+bitterness.
+
+"But who is Margaret Woffington," she cried, "that she should pretend
+to honest love, or feel insulted by the proffer of a stolen regard? And
+what have we to do with homes, or hearts, or firesides? Have we not the
+playhouse, its paste diamonds, its paste feelings, and the loud applause
+of fops and sots--hearts?--beneath loads of tinsel and paint? Nonsense!
+The love that can go with souls to heaven--such love for us? Nonsense!
+These men applaud us, cajole us, swear to us, flatter us; and yet,
+forsooth, we would have them respect us too."
+
+"My dear benefactress," said Triplet, "they are not worthy of you."
+
+"I thought this man was not all dross; from the first I never felt his
+passion an insult. Oh, Triplet! I could have loved this man--really
+loved him! and I longed so to be good. Oh, God! oh, God!"
+
+"Thank Heaven, you don't love him!" cried Triplet, hastily. "Thank
+Heaven for that!"
+
+"Love him? Love a man who comes to me with a silly second-hand affection
+from his insipid baby-face, and offers me half, or two-thirds, or a
+third of his worthless heart? I hate him! and her! and all the world!"
+
+"That is what I call a very proper feeling," said poor Triplet, with a
+weak attempt to soothe her. "Then break with him at once, and all will
+be well."
+
+"Break with him? Are you mad? No! Since he plays with the tools of my
+trade I shall fool him worse than he has me. I will feed his passion
+full, tempt him, torture him, play with him, as the angler plays a fish
+upon his hook. And, when his very life depends on me, then by degrees
+he shall see me cool, and cool, and freeze into bitter aversion. Then he
+shall rue the hour he fought with the Devil against my soul, and played
+false with a brain and heart like mine!"
+
+"But his poor wife? You will have pity on her?"
+
+"His wife! Are wives' hearts the only hearts that throb, and burn, and
+break? His wife must defend herself. It is not from me that mercy can
+come to her, nor from her to me. I loathe her, and I shall not forget
+that you took her part. Only, if you are her friend, take my advice,
+don't you assist her. I shall defeat her without that. Let her fight
+_her_ battle, and _I_ mine.
+
+"Ah, madam! she cannot fight; she is a dove."
+
+"You are a fool! What do you know about women? You were with her five
+minutes, and she turned you inside out. My life on it, while I have been
+fooling my time here, she is in the field, with all the arts of our sex,
+simplicity at the head of them."
+
+Triplet was making a futile endeavor to convert her to his view of her
+rival, when a knock suddenly came to his door. A slovenly girl, one of
+his own neighbors, brought him a bit of paper, with a line written in
+pencil.
+
+"'Tis from a lady, who waits below," said the girl.
+
+Mrs. Woffington went again to the window, and there she saw getting out
+of a coach, and attended by James Burdock, Mabel Vane, who had sent up
+her name on the back of an old letter.
+
+"What shall I do?" said Triplet, as soon as he recovered the first
+stunning effects of this _contretemps._ To his astonishment, Mrs.
+Woffington bade the girl show the lady upstairs. The girl went down on
+this errand.
+
+"But _you_ are here," remonstrated Triplet. "Oh, to be sure, you can
+go into the other room. There is plenty of time to avoid her," said
+Triplet, in a very natural tremor. "This way, madam!"
+
+Mrs. Woffington stood in the middle of the room like a statue.
+
+"What does she come here for?" said she, sternly. "You have not told me
+all."
+
+"I don't know," cried poor Triplet, in dismay; "and I think the Devil
+brings her here to confound me. For Heaven's sake, retire! What will
+become of us all? There will be murder, I know there will!"
+
+To his horror, Mrs. Woffington would not move. "You are on her side,"
+said she slowly, with a concentration of spite and suspicion. She looked
+frightful at this moment. "All the better for me," added she, with a
+world of female malignity.
+
+Triplet could not make head against this blow; he gasped, and pointed
+piteously to the inner door. "No; I will know two things: the course she
+means to take, and the terms you two are upon."
+
+By this time Mrs. Vane's light foot was heard on the stair, and Triplet
+sank into a chair. "They will tear one another to pieces," said he.
+
+A tap came to the door.
+
+He looked fearfully round for the woman whom jealousy had so speedily
+turned from an angel to a fiend; and saw with dismay that she had
+actually had the hardihood to slip round and enter the picture again.
+She had not quite arranged herself when her rival knocked.
+
+Triplet dragged himself to the door. Before he opened it, he looked
+fearfully over his shoulder, and received a glance of cool, bitter,
+deadly hostility, that boded ill both for him and his visitor. Triplet's
+apprehensions were not unreasonable. His benefactress and this sweet
+lady were rivals!
+
+Jealousy is a dreadful passion, it makes us tigers. The jealous always
+thirst for blood. At any moment when reason is a little weaker than
+usual, they are ready to kill the thing they hate, or the thing they
+love.
+
+Any open collision between these ladies would scatter ill consequences
+all round. Under such circumstances, we are pretty sure to say or do
+something wicked, silly, or unreasonable. But what tortured Triplet
+more than anything was his own particular notion that fate doomed him
+to witness a formal encounter between these two women, and of course
+an encounter of such a nature as we in our day illustrate by "Kilkenny
+cats."
+
+To be sure Mrs. Vane had appeared a dove, but doves can peck on certain
+occasions, and no doubt she had a spirit at bottom. Her coming to
+him proved it. And had not the other been a dove all the morning and
+afternoon? Yet, jealousy had turned her to a fiend before his eyes. Then
+if (which was not probable) no collision took place, what a situation
+was his! Mrs. Woffington (his buckler from starvation) suspected him,
+and would distort every word that came from Mrs. Vane's lips.
+
+Triplet's situation was, in fact, that of AEneas in the storm.
+
+"Olim et haec meminisse juvabit--" "But, while present, such things
+don't please any one a bit."
+
+It was the sort of situation we can laugh at, and see the fun of it six
+months after, if not shipwrecked on it at the time.
+
+With a ghastly smile the poor quaking hypocrite welcomed Mrs. Vane, and
+professed a world of innocent delight that she had so honored his humble
+roof.
+
+She interrupted his compliments, and begged him to see whether she was
+followed by a gentleman in a cloak.
+
+Triplet looked out of the window.
+
+"Sir Charles Pomander!" gasped he.
+
+Sir Charles was at the very door. If, however, he had intended to mount
+the stairs he changed his mind, for he suddenly went off round the
+corner with a businesslike air, real or fictitious.
+
+"He is gone, madam," said Triplet.
+
+Mrs. Vane, the better to escape detection or observation, wore a
+thick mantle and a hood that concealed her features. Of these Triplet
+debarrassed her.
+
+"Sit down, madam;" and he hastily drew a chair so that her back was to
+the picture.
+
+She was pale, and trembled a little. She hid her face in her hands a
+moment, then, recovering her courage, "she begged Mr. Triplet to pardon
+her for coming to him. He had inspired her with confidence," she said;
+"he had offered her his services, and so she had come to him, for she
+had no other friend to aid her in her sore distress." She might have
+added, that with the tact of her sex she had read Triplet to the bottom,
+and came to him, as she would to a benevolent, muscular old woman.
+
+Triplet's natural impulse was to repeat most warmly his offers of
+service. He did so; and then, conscious of the picture, had a misgiving.
+
+"Dear Mr. Triplet," began Mrs. Vane, "you know this person, Mrs.
+Woffington?"
+
+"Yes, madam," replied Triplet, lowering his eyes, "I am honored by her
+acquaintance."
+
+"You will take me to the theater where she acts?"
+
+"Yes, madam; to the boxes, I presume?"
+
+"No! oh, no! How could I bear that? To the place where the actors and
+actresses are."
+
+Triplet demurred. This would be courting that very collision, the dread
+of which even now oppressed him.
+
+At the first faint sign of resistance she began to supplicate him, as if
+he was some great, stern tyrant.
+
+"Oh, you must not, you cannot refuse me. You do not know what I risk
+to obtain this. I have risen from my bed to come to you. I have a fire
+here!" She pressed her hand to her brow. "Oh, take me to her!"
+
+"Madam, I will do anything for you. But be advised; trust to my
+knowledge of human nature. What you require is madness. Gracious
+Heavens! you two are rivals, and when rivals meet there's murder or
+deadly mischief."
+
+"Ah! if you knew my sorrow, you would not thwart me. Oh, Mr. Triplet!
+little did I think you were as cruel as the rest." So then this cruel
+monster whimpered out that he should do any folly she insisted upon.
+"Good, kind Mr. Triplet!" said Mrs. Vane. "Let me look in your face?
+Yes, I see you are honest and true. I will tell you all." Then she
+poured in his ear her simple tale, unadorned and touching as Judah's
+speech to Joseph. She told him how she loved her husband; how he had
+loved her; how happy they were for the first six months; how her heart
+sank when he left her; how he had promised she should join him, and on
+that hope she lived. "But for two months he had ceased to speak of this,
+and I grew heart-sick waiting for the summons that never came. At last
+I felt I should die if I did not see him; so I plucked up courage and
+wrote that I must come to him. He did not forbid me, so I left our
+country home. Oh, sir! I cannot make you know how my heart burned to be
+by his side. I counted the hours of the journey; I counted the miles.
+At last I reached his house; I found a gay company there. I was a little
+sorry, but I said: 'His friends shall be welcome, right welcome. He has
+asked them to welcome his wife.'"
+
+"Poor thing!" muttered Triplet.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Triplet! they were there to do honor to ----, and the wife
+was neither expected nor desired. There lay my letters with their seals
+unbroken. I know all _his_ letters by heart, Mr. Triplet. The seals
+unbroken--unbroken! Mr. Triplet."
+
+"It is abominable!" cried Triplet fiercely. "And she who sat in my
+seat--in his house, and in his heart--was this lady, the actress you so
+praised to me?"
+
+"That lady, ma'am," said Triplet, "has been deceived as well as you."
+
+"I am convinced of it," said Mabel.
+
+"And it is my painful duty to tell you, madam, that, with all her
+talents and sweetness, she has a fiery temper; yes, a very fiery
+temper," continued Triplet, stoutly, though with an uneasy glance in
+a certain direction; "and I have reason to believe she is angry, and
+thinks more of her own ill-usage than yours. Don't you go near her.
+Trust to my knowledge of the sex, madam; I am a dramatic writer. Did you
+ever read the 'Rival Queens'?"
+
+"No."
+
+"I thought not. Well, madam, one stabs the other, and the one that is
+stabbed says things to the other that are more biting than steel. The
+prudent course for you is to keep apart, and be always cheerful, and
+welcome him with a smile--and--have you read 'The Way to keep him'?"
+
+"No, Mr. Triplet," said Mabel, firmly, "I cannot feign. Were I to
+attempt talent and deceit, I should be weaker than I am now. Honesty and
+right are all my strength. I will cry to her for justice and mercy. And
+if I cry in vain, I shall die, Mr. Triplet, that is all."
+
+"Don't cry, dear lady," said Triplet, in a broken voice.
+
+"It is impossible!" cried she, suddenly. "I am not learned, but I can
+read faces. I always could, and so could my Aunt Deborah before me. I
+read you right, Mr. Triplet, and I have read her too. Did not my heart
+warm to her among them all? There is a heart at the bottom of all her
+acting, and that heart is good and noble."
+
+"She is, madam! she is! and charitable too. I know a family she saved
+from starvation and despair. Oh, yes! she has a heart--to feel for the
+_poor,_ at all events."
+
+"And am I not the poorest of the poor?" cried Mrs. Vane. "I have
+no father nor mother, Mr. Triplet; my husband is all I have in the
+world--all I _had,_ I mean."
+
+Triplet, deeply affected himself, stole a look at Mrs. Woffington. She
+was pale; but her face was composed into a sort of dogged obstinacy.
+He was disgusted with her. "Madam," said he, sternly, "there is a wild
+beast more cruel and savage than wolves and bears; it is called 'a
+rival,' and don't you get in its way."
+
+At this moment, in spite of Triplet's precaution, Mrs. Vane, casting
+her eye accidentally round, caught sight of the picture, and instantly
+started up, crying, "She is there!" Triplet was thunderstruck. "What
+likeness!" cried she, and moved toward the supposed picture.
+
+"Don't go to it!" cried Triplet, aghast; "the color is wet."
+
+She stopped; but her eye and her very soul dwelt upon the supposed
+picture; and Triplet stood quaking. "How like! It seems to breathe. You
+are a great painter, sir. A glass is not truer."
+
+Triplet, hardly knowing what he said, muttered something about "critics
+and lights and shades."
+
+"Then they are blind!" cried Mabel, never for a moment removing her eye
+from the object. "Tell me not of lights and shades. The pictures I see
+have a look of paint; but yours looks like life. Oh, that she were here,
+as this _wonderful_ image of hers is. I would speak to her. I am not
+wise or learned; but orators never pleaded as I would plead to her
+for my Ernest's heart." Still her eye glanced upon the picture; and I
+suppose her heart realized an actual presence, though her judgment did
+not; for by some irresistible impulse she sank slowly down and stretched
+her clasped hands toward it, while sobs and words seemed to break direct
+from her bursting heart. "Oh, yes! you are beautiful, you are gifted,
+and the eyes of thousands wait upon your very word and look. What wonder
+that he, ardent, refined, and genial, should lay his heart at your feet?
+And I have nothing but my love to make him love me. I cannot take him
+from you. Oh, be generous to the weak! Oh, give him back to me! What is
+one heart more to you? You are so rich, and I am so poor, that without
+his love I have nothing, and can do nothing but sit me down and cry till
+my heart breaks. Give him back to me, beautiful, terrible woman! for,
+with all your gifts, you cannot love him as his poor Mabel does; and I
+will love you longer perhaps than men can love. I will kiss your feet,
+and Heaven above will bless you; and I will bless you and pray for you
+to my dying day. Ah! it is alive! I am frightened! I am frightened!" She
+ran to Triplet and seized his arm. "No!" cried she, quivering close to
+him; "I'm not frightened, for it was for me she--Oh, Mrs. Woffington!"
+and, hiding her face on Mr. Triplet's shoulder, she blushed, and wept,
+and trembled.
+
+What was it had betrayed Mrs. Woffington? _A tear!_
+
+During the whole of this interview (which had taken a turn so unlooked
+for by the listener) she might have said with Beatrice, "What fire is in
+mine ears?" and what self-reproach and chill misgiving in her heart too.
+She had passed through a hundred emotions, as the young innocent wife
+told her sad and simple story. But, anxious now above all things to
+escape without being recognized--for she had long repented having
+listened at all, or placed herself in her present position--she fiercely
+mastered her countenance; but, though she ruled her features, she could
+not rule her heart. And when the young wife, instead of inveighing
+against her, came to her as a supplicant, with faith in her goodness,
+and sobbed to her for pity, a big tear rolled down her cheek, and proved
+her something more than a picture or an actress.
+
+Mrs. Vane, as we have related, screamed and ran to Triplet.
+
+Mrs. Woffington came instantly from her frame, and stood before them in
+a despairing attitude, with one hand upon her brow. For a single moment
+her impulse was to fly from the apartment, so ashamed was she of having
+listened, and of meeting her rival in this way; but she conquered
+this feeling, and, as soon as she saw Mrs. Vane too had recovered some
+composure, she said to Triplet, in a low but firm voice:
+
+"Leave us, sir. No living creature must hear what I say to this lady!"
+
+Triplet remonstrated, but Mrs. Vane said, faintly:
+
+"Oh, yes, good Mr. Triplet, I would rather you left me."
+
+Triplet, full of misgivings, was obliged to retire.
+
+"Be composed, ladies," said he piteously. "Neither of you could help
+it;" and so he entered his inner room, where he sat and listened
+nervously, for he could not shake off all apprehension of a personal
+encounter.
+
+In the room he had left there was a long, uneasy silence. Both ladies
+were greatly embarrassed. It was the actress who spoke first. All trace
+of emotion, except a certain pallor, was driven from her face. She spoke
+with very marked courtesy, but in tones that seemed to freeze as they
+dropped one by one from her mouth.
+
+"I trust, madam, you will do me the justice to believe I did not know
+Mr. Vane was married?"
+
+"I am sure of it!" said Mabel, warmly. "I feel you are as good as you
+are gifted."
+
+"Mrs. Vane, I am not!" said the other, almost sternly. "You are
+deceived!"
+
+"Then Heaven have mercy on me! No! I am not deceived, you pitied me. You
+speak coldly now; but I know your face and your heart--you pity me!"
+
+"I do respect, admire, and pity you," said Mrs. Woffington, sadly; "and
+I could consent nevermore to communicate with your--with Mr. Vane."
+
+"Ah!" cried Mabel; "Heaven will bless you! But will you give me back his
+heart?"
+
+"How can I do that?" said Mrs. Woffington, uneasily; she had not
+bargained for this.
+
+"The magnet can repel as well as attract. Can you not break your own
+spell? What will his presence be to me, if his heart remain behind?"
+
+"You ask much of me."
+
+"Alas! I do."
+
+"But I could do even this." She paused for breath. "And perhaps if you,
+who have not only touched my heart, but won my respect, were to say
+to me, 'Do so,' I should do it." Again she paused, and spoke with
+difficulty; for the bitter struggle took away her breath. "Mr. Vane
+thinks better of me than I deserve. I have--only--to make him believe
+me--worthless--worse than I am--and he will drop me like an adder--and
+love you better, far better--for having known--admired--and despised
+Margaret Woffington."
+
+"Oh!" cried Mabel, "I shall bless you every hour of my life."
+Her countenance brightened into rapture at the picture, and Mrs.
+Woffington's darkened with bitterness as she watched her.
+
+But Mabel reflected. "Rob you of your good name?" said this pure
+creature. "Ah, Mabel Vane! you think but of yourself."
+
+"I thank you, madam," said Mrs. Woffington, a little touched by this
+unexpected trait; "but some one must suffer here, and--"
+
+Mabel Vane interrupted her. "This would be cruel and base," said she
+firmly. "No woman's forehead shall be soiled by me. Oh, madam! beauty is
+admired, talent is adored; but virtue is a woman's crown. With it, the
+poor are rich; without it, the rich are poor. It walks through life
+upright, and never hides its head for high or low."
+
+Her face was as the face of an angel now; and the actress, conquered by
+her beauty and her goodness, actually bowed her head and gently kissed
+the hand of the country wife whom she had quizzed a few hours ago.
+
+Frailty paid this homage to virtue!
+
+Mabel Vane hardly noticed it; her eye was lifted to heaven, and her
+heart was gone there for help in a sore struggle.
+
+"This would be to assassinate you; no less. And so, madam," she sighed,
+"with God's help, I do refuse your offer; choosing rather, if needs be,
+to live desolate, but innocent--many a better than I hath lived so--ay!
+if God wills it, to die, with my hopes and my heart crushed, but my
+hands unstained; for so my humble life has passed."
+
+How beautiful, great, and pure goodness is! It paints heaven on the face
+that has it; it wakens the sleeping souls that meet it.
+
+At the bottom of Margaret Woffington's heart lay a soul, unknown to the
+world, scarce known to herself--a heavenly harp, on which ill airs of
+passion had been played--but still it was there, in tune with all that
+is true, pure, really great and good. And now the flush that a great
+heart sends to the brow, to herald great actions, came to her cheek and
+brow.
+
+"Humble!" she cried. "Such as you are the diamonds of our race. You
+angel of truth and goodness, you have conquered!"
+
+"Oh, yes! yes! Thank God, yes!"
+
+"What a fiend I must be could I injure you! The poor heart we have both
+overrated shall be yours again, and yours for ever. In my hands it
+is painted glass; in the luster of a love like yours it may become a
+priceless jewel." She turned her head away and pondered a moment, then
+suddenly offered to Mrs. Vane her hand with nobleness and majesty; "Can
+you trust me?" The actress too was divinely beautiful now, for her good
+angel shone through her.
+
+"I could trust you with my life!" was the reply.
+
+ "Ah! if I might call you friend, dear lady, what would I not
+do--suffer--resign--to be worthy that title!"
+
+"No, not friend!" cried the warm, innocent Mabel; "sister! I will call
+you sister. I have no sister."
+
+ "Sister!" said Mrs. Woffington. "Oh, do not mock me! Alas! you do not
+know what you say. That sacred name to me, from lips so pure as yours.
+Mrs. Vane," said she, timidly, "would you think me presumptuous if I
+begged you to--to let me kiss you?"
+
+ The words were scarce spoken before Mrs. Vane's arms were wreathed round
+her neck, and that innocent cheek laid sweetly to hers.
+
+Mrs. Woffington strained her to her bosom, and two great hearts, whose
+grandeur the world, worshiper of charlatans, never discovered, had found
+each other out and beat against each other. A great heart is as quick to
+find another out as the world is slow.
+
+Mrs. Woffington burst into a passion of tears and clasped Mabel tighter
+and tighter in a half-despairing way. Mabel mistook the cause, but she
+kissed her tears away.
+
+"Dear sister," said she, "be comforted. I love you. My heart warmed
+to you the first moment I saw you. A woman's love and gratitude are
+something. Ah! you will never find me change. This is for life, look
+you."
+
+"God grant it!" cried the other poor woman. "Oh, it is not that, it is
+not that; it is because I am so little worthy of this. It is a sin to
+deceive you. I am not good like you. You do not know me!"
+
+"You do not know yourself if you say so!" cried Mabel; and to her hearer
+the words seemed to come from heaven. "I read faces," said Mabel. "I
+read yours at sight, and you are what I set you down; and nobody must
+breathe a word against you, not even yourself. Do you think I am blind?
+You are beautiful, you are good, you are my sister, and I love you!"
+
+"Heaven forgive me!" thought the other. "How can I resign this angel's
+good opinion? Surely Heaven sends this blessed dew to my parched heart!"
+And now she burned to make good her promise and earn this virtuous
+wife's love. She folded her once more in her arms, and then, taking her
+by the hand, led her tenderly into Triplet's inner room. She made her
+lie down on the bed, and placed pillows high for her like a mother, and
+leaned over her as she lay, and pressed her lips gently to her forehead.
+Her fertile brain had already digested a plan, but she had resolved that
+this pure and candid soul should take no lessons of deceit. "Lie there,"
+said she, "till I open the door: then join us. Do you know what I am
+going to do? I am not going to restore you your husband's heart, but
+to show you it never really left you. You read faces; well, I read
+circumstances. Matters are not as you thought," said she, with all a
+woman's tact. "I cannot explain, but you will see." She then gave Mrs.
+Triplet peremptory orders not to let her charge rise from the bed until
+the preconcerted signal.
+
+Mrs. Vane was, in fact, so exhausted by all she had gone through
+that she was in no condition to resist. She cast a look of childlike
+confidence upon her rival, and then closed her eyes, and tried not to
+tremble all over and listen like a frightened hare.
+
+*****
+
+It is one great characteristic of genius to do great things with little
+things. Paxton could see that so small a matter as a greenhouse could be
+dilated into a crystal palace, and with two common materials--glass
+and iron--he raised the palace of the genii; the brightest idea and the
+noblest ornament added to Europe in this century--the koh-i-noor of the
+west. Livy's definition of Archimedes goes on the same ground.
+
+*****
+
+Peg Woffington was a genius in her way. On entering Triplet's studio her
+eye fell upon three trifles--Mrs. Vane's hood and mantle, the back of
+an old letter, and Mr. Triplet. (It will be seen how she worked these
+slight materials.) On the letter was written in pencil simply these two
+words, "Mabel Vane." Mrs. Woffington wrote above these words two more,
+"Alone and unprotected." She put this into Mr. Triplet's hand, and bade
+him take it down stairs and give it Sir Charles Pomander, whose retreat,
+she knew, must have been fictitious. "You will find him round the
+corner," said she, "or in some shop that looks this way." While uttering
+these words she had put on Mrs. Vane's hood and mantle.
+
+No answer was returned, and no Triplet went out of the door.
+
+She turned, and there he was kneeling on both knees close under her.
+
+"Bid me jump out of that window, madam; bid me kill those two gentlemen,
+and I will not rebel. You are a great lady, a talented lady; you have
+been insulted, and no doubt blood will flow. It ought--it is your due;
+but that innocent lady, do not compromise her!"
+
+"Oh, Mr. Triplet, you need not kneel to me. I do not wish to force you
+to render me a service. I have no right to dictate to you."
+
+"Oh, dear!" cried Triplet, "don't talk in that way. I owe you my life,
+but I think of your own peace of mind, for you are not one to be happy
+if you injure the innocent!" He rose suddenly, and cried: "Madam,
+promise me not to stir till I come back!"
+
+"Where are you going?"
+
+"To bring the husband to his wife's feet, and so save one angel from
+despair, and another angel from a great crime."
+
+"Well, I suppose you are wiser than I," said she. "But, if you are in
+earnest, you had better be quick, for somehow I am rather changeable
+about these people."
+
+"You can't help that, madam, it is your sex; you are an angel. May I
+be permitted to kiss your hand? you are all goodness and gentleness at
+bottom. I fly to Mr. Vane, and we will be back before you have time to
+repent, and give the Devil the upper hand again, my dear, good, sweet
+lady!"
+
+Away flew Triplet, all unconscious that he was not Mrs. Woffington's
+opponent, but puppet. He ran, he tore, animated by a good action, and
+spurred by the notion that he was in direct competition with the fiend
+for the possession of his benefactress. He had no sooner turned the
+corner than Mrs. Woffington, looking out of the window, observed Sir
+Charles Pomander on the watch, as she had expected. She remained at
+the window with Mrs. Vane's hood on, until Sir Charles's eye in its
+wanderings lighted on her, and then, dropping Mrs. Vane's letter from
+the window, she hastily withdrew.
+
+Sir Charles eagerly picked it up. His eye brightened when he read the
+short contents. With a self-satisfied smile he mounted the stair.
+He found in Triplet's house a lady who seemed startled at her late
+hardihood. She sat with her back to the door, her hood drawn tightly
+down, and wore an air of trembling consciousness. Sir Charles smiled
+again. He knew the sex, at least he said so. (It is an assertion often
+ventured upon.) Accordingly Sir Charles determined to come down from
+his height, and court nature and innocence in their own tones. This he
+rightly judged must be the proper course to take with Mrs. Vane. He fell
+down with mock ardor upon one knee.
+
+The supposed Mrs. Vane gave a little squeak.
+
+"Dear Mrs. Vane," cried he, "be not alarmed; loveliness neglected, and
+simplicity deceived, insure respect as well as adoration. Ah!" (A sigh.)
+
+"Oh, get up, sir; do, please. Ah!" (A sigh.)
+
+"You sigh, sweetest of human creatures. Ah! why did not a nature like
+yours fall into hands that would have cherished it as it deserves? Had
+Heaven bestowed on me this hand, which I take--"
+
+"Oh, please, sir--"
+
+"With the profoundest respect, would I have abandoned such a treasure
+for an actress?--a Woffington! as artificial and hollow a jade as ever
+winked at a side box!"
+
+"Is she, sir?"
+
+"Notorious, madam. Your husband is the only man in London who does not
+see through her. How different are you! Even I, who have no taste for
+actresses, found myself revived, refreshed, ameliorated by that engaging
+picture of innocence and virtue you drew this morning; yourself
+the bright and central figure. Ah, dear angel! I remember all your
+favorites, and envy them their place in your recollections. Your Barbary
+mare--"
+
+"Hen, sir!
+
+"Of course I meant hen; and Gray Gillian, his old nurse--"
+
+"No, no, no! she is the mare, sir. He! he! he!"
+
+"So she is. And Dame--Dame--"
+
+"Best!"
+
+"Ah! I knew it. You see how I remember them all. And all carry me back
+to those innocent days which fleet too soon--days when an angel like
+you might have weaned me from the wicked pleasures of the town, to the
+placid delights of a rural existence!"
+
+"Alas, sir!"
+
+"You sigh. It is not yet too late. I am a convert to you; I swear it
+on this white hand. Ah! how can I relinquish it, pretty fluttering
+prisoner?"
+
+"Oh, please--"
+
+"Stay a while."
+
+"No! please, sir--"
+
+"While I fetter thee with a worthy manacle." Sir Charles slipped a
+diamond ring of great value upon his pretty prisoner.
+
+"La, sir, how pretty!" cried innocence.
+
+Sir Charles then undertook to prove that the luster of the ring was
+faint, compared with that of the present wearer's eyes. This did not
+suit innocence; she hung her head and fluttered, and showed a bashful
+repugnance to look her admirer in the face. Sir Charles playfully
+insisted, and Mrs. Woffington was beginning to be a little at a loss,
+when suddenly voices were heard upon the stairs.
+
+_"My husband!"_ cried the false Mrs. Vane, and in a moment she rose and
+darted into Triplet's inner apartment.
+
+Mr. Vane and Mr. Triplet were talking earnestly as they came up the
+stair. It seems the wise Triplet had prepared a little dramatic scene
+for his own refreshment, as well as for the ultimate benefit of all
+parties. He had persuaded Mr. Vane to accompany him by warm, mysterious
+promises of a happy _denouement;_ and now, having conducted that
+gentleman as far as his door, he was heard to say:
+
+"And now, sir, you shall see one who waits to forget grief,
+suspicion--all, in your arms. Behold!" and here he flung the door open.
+
+"The devil!"
+
+"You flatter me!" said Pomander, who had had time to recover his
+_aplomb,_ somewhat shaken, at first, by Mr. Vane's inopportune arrival.
+
+Now it is to be observed that Mr. Vane had not long ago seen his wife
+lying on her bed, to all appearance incapable of motion.
+
+Mr. Vane, before Triplet could recover his surprise, inquired of
+Pomander why he had sent for him. "And what," added he, "is the grief,
+suspicion, I am, according to Mr. Triplet, to forget in your arms?"
+
+Mr. Vane added this last sentence in rather a testy manner.
+
+"Why, the fact is--" began Sir Charles, without the remotest idea of
+what the fact was going to be.
+
+"That Sir Charles Pomander--" interrupted Triplet.
+
+"But Mr. Triplet is going to explain," said Sir Charles, keenly.
+
+"Nay, sir; be yours the pleasing duty. But, now I think of it," resumed
+Triplet, "why not tell the simple truth? it is not a play! She I brought
+you here to see was not Sir Charles Pomander; but--"
+
+"I forbid you to complete the name!" cried Pomander.
+
+"I command you to complete the name!" cried Vane.
+
+"Gentlemen, gentlemen! how can I do both?" remonstrated Triplet.
+
+"Enough, sir!" cried Pomander. "It is a lady's secret. I am the guardian
+of that lady's honor."
+
+"She has chosen a strange guardian of her honor!" said Vane bitterly.
+
+"Gentlemen!" cried poor Triplet, who did not at all like the turn
+things were taking, "I give you my word, she does not even know of Sir
+Charies's presence here!"
+
+"Who?" cried Vane, furiously. "Man alive! who are you speaking of?"
+
+"Mrs. Vane."
+
+"My wife!" cried Vane, trembling with anger and jealousy. "She here! and
+with this man?"
+
+"No!" cried Triplet. "With me, with me! Not with him, of course."
+
+"Boaster!" cried Vane, contemptuously. "But that is a part of your
+profession!"
+
+Pomander, irritated, scornfully drew from his pocket the ladies' joint
+production, which had fallen at his feet from Mrs. Woffington's hand.
+He presented this to Mr. Vane, who took it very uneasily; a mist swam
+before his eyes as he read the words: "Alone and unprotected--Mabel
+Vane." He had no sooner read these words, than he found he loved his
+wife; when he tampered with his treasure, he did not calculate on
+another seeking it.
+
+This was Pomander's hour of triumph! He proceeded coolly to explain to
+Mr. Vane, that, Mrs. Woffington having deserted him for Mr. Vane,
+and Mr. Vane his wife for Mrs. Woffington, the bereaved parties had,
+according to custom, agreed to console each other.
+
+This soothing little speech was interrupted by Mr. Vane's sword flashing
+suddenly out of its sheath; while that gentleman, white with rage and
+jealousy, bade him instantly take to his guard, or be run through the
+body like some noxious animal.
+
+Sir Charles drew his sword, and, in spite of Triplet's weak
+interference, half a dozen passes were rapidly exchanged, when suddenly
+the door of the inner room opened, and a lady in a hood pronounced, in
+a voice which was an excellent imitation of Mrs. Vane's, the word,
+"False!"
+
+The combatants lowered their points.
+
+"You hear, sir!" cried Triplet.
+
+"You see, sir!" said Pomander.
+
+"Mabel!--wife!" cried Mr. Vane, in agony. "Oh, say this is not true! Oh,
+say that letter is a forgery! Say, at least, it was by some treachery
+you were lured to this den of iniquity! Oh, speak!"
+
+The lady silently beckoned to some person inside.
+
+"You know I loved you--you know how bitterly I repent the infatuation
+that brought me to the feet of another!"
+
+The lady replied not, though Vane's soul appeared to hang upon her
+answer. But she threw the door open and there appeared another lady,
+the real Mrs. Vane. Mrs. Woffington then threw off her hood, and, to
+Sir Charles Pomander's consternation, revealed the features of that
+ingenious person, who seemed born to outwit him.
+
+"You heard that fervent declaration, madam?" said she to Mrs. Vane. "I
+present to you, madam, a gentleman who regrets that he mistook the real
+direction of his feelings. And to you, sir," continued she, with great
+dignity, "I present a lady who will never mistake either her feelings or
+her duty."
+
+"Ernest! dear Ernest!" cried Mrs. Vane, blushing as if she was the
+culprit. And she came forward all love and tenderness.
+
+Her truant husband kneeled at her feet of course. No! he said, rather
+sternly, "How came you here, Mabel?"
+
+"Mrs. Vane," said the actress, "fancied you had mislaid that
+weathercock, your heart, in Covent Garden, and that an actress had seen
+in it a fit companion for her own, and had feloniously appropriated it.
+She came to me to inquire after it."
+
+"But this letter, signed by you?" said Vane, still addressing Mabel.
+
+"Was written by me on a paper which accidentally contained Mrs. Vane's
+name. The fact is, Mr. Vane--I can hardly look you in the face--I had a
+little wager with Sir Charles here; his diamond ring--which you may
+see has become my diamond ring"--a horrible wry face from Sir
+Charles--"against my left glove that I could bewitch a country
+gentleman's imagination, and make him think me an angel. Unfortunately
+the owner of his heart appeared, and, like poor Mr. Vane, took our play
+for earnest. It became necessary to disabuse her and to open your eyes.
+Have I done so?"
+
+"You have, madam," said Vane, wincing at each word she said. But at
+last, by a mighty effort, he mastered himself, and, coming to Mrs.
+Woffington with a quivering lip, he held out his hand suddenly in a
+very manly way. "I have been the dupe of my own vanity," said he, "and
+I thank you for this lesson." Poor Mrs. Woffington's fortitude had
+well-nigh left her at this.
+
+"Mabel," he cried, "is this humiliation any punishment for my folly? any
+guaranty for my repentance? Can you forgive me?"
+
+"It is all forgiven, Ernest. But, oh, you are mistaken." She glided to
+Mrs. Woffington. "What do we not owe you, sister?" whispered she.
+
+"Nothing! that word pays all," was the reply. She then slipped her
+address into Mrs. Vane's hand, and, courtesying to all the company, she
+hastily left the room.
+
+Sir Charles Pomander followed; but he was not quick enough. She got a
+start, and purposely avoided him, and for three days neither the public
+nor private friends saw this poor woman's face.
+
+Mr. and Mrs. Vane prepared to go also; but Mrs. Vane would thank good
+Mr. Triplet and Mrs. Triplet for their kindness to her.
+
+Triplet the benevolent blushed, was confused and delighted; but
+suddenly, turning somewhat sorrowful, he said: "Mr. Vane, madam, made
+use of an expression which caused a momentary pang. He called this a den
+of iniquity. Now this is my studio! But never mind."
+
+Mr. Vane asked his pardon for so absurd an error, and the pair left
+Triplet in all the enjoyment which does come now and then to an honest
+man, whether this dirty little world will or not.
+
+A coach was called and they went home to Bloomsbury. Few words were
+said; but the repentant husband often silently pressed this angel to his
+bosom, and the tears which found their way to her beautiful eyelashes
+were tears of joy.
+
+This weakish, and consequently villainous, though not ill-disposed
+person would have gone down to Willoughby that night; but his wife had
+great good sense. She would not take her husband off, like a school-boy
+caught out of bounds. She begged him to stay while she made certain
+purchases; but, for all that, her heart burned to be at home. So in less
+than a week after the events we have related they left London.
+
+Meantime, every day Mrs. Vane paid a quiet visit to Mrs. Woffington (for
+some days the actress admitted no other visitor), and was with her but
+two hours before she left London. On that occasion she found her very
+sad.
+
+"I shall never see you again in this world," said she; "but I beg of you
+to write to me, that my mind may be in contact with yours."
+
+She then asked Mabel, in her half-sorrowful, half-bitter way, how many
+months it would be ere she was forgotten.
+
+Mabel answered by quietly crying. So then they embraced; and Mabel
+assured her friend she was not one of those who change their minds. "It
+is for life, dear sister; it is for life," cried she.
+
+"Swear this to me," said the other, almost sternly. "But no. I have more
+confidence in that candid face and pure nature than in a human being's
+oath. If you are happy, remember you owe me something. If you are
+unhappy, come to me, and I will love you as men cannot love."
+
+Then vows passed between them, for a singular tie bound these two women;
+and then the actress showed a part at least of her sore heart to her new
+sister; and that sister was surprised and grieved, and pitied her truly
+and deeply, and they wept on each other's neck; and at last they were
+fain to part. They parted; and true it was, they never met again in this
+world. They parted in sorrow; but when they meet again, it shall be with
+joy.
+
+Women are generally such faithless, unscrupulous and pitiless humbugs
+in their dealings with their own sex--which, whatever they may say, they
+despise at heart--that I am happy to be able to say, Mrs. Vane proved
+true as steel. She was a noble-minded, simple-minded creature; she was
+also a constant creature. Constancy is a rare, a beautiful, a godlike
+virtue.
+
+Four times every year she wrote a long letter to Mrs. Woffington; and
+twice a year, in the cold weather, she sent her a hamper of country
+delicacies that would have victualed a small garrison. And when
+her sister left this earthly scene--a humble, pious, long-repentant
+Christian--Mrs. Vane wore mourning for her, and sorrowed over her; but
+not as those who cannot hope to meet again.
+
+*****
+
+My story as a work of art--good, bad or indifferent--ends with that last
+sentence. If a reader accompanies me further, I shall feel flattered,
+and he does so at his own risk.
+
+My reader knows that all this befell long ago. That Woffington is gay,
+and Triplet sad, no more. That Mabel's, and all the bright eyes of that
+day, have long been dim, and all its cunning voices hushed. Judge
+then whether I am one of those happy story-tellers who can end with
+a wedding. No! this story must wind up, as yours and mine
+must--to-morrow--or to-morrow--or to-morrow! when our little sand is
+run.
+
+Sir Charles Pomander lived a man of pleasure until sixty. He then
+became a man of pain; he dragged the chain about eight years, and died
+miserably.
+
+Mr. Cibber not so much died as "slipped his wind"--a nautical expression
+that conveys the idea of an easy exit. He went off, quiet and genteel.
+He was past eighty, and had lived fast. His servant called him at seven
+in the morning. "I will shave at eight," said Mr. Cibber. John brought
+the hot water at eight; but his master had taken advantage of this
+interval in his toilet to die!--to avoid shaving?
+
+Snarl and Soaper conducted the criticism of their day with credit and
+respectability until a good old age, and died placidly a natural death,
+like twaddle, sweet or sour.
+
+The Triplets, while their patroness lived, did pretty well. She got a
+tragedy of his accepted at her theater. She made him send her a copy,
+and with her scissors cut out about half; sometimes thinning, sometimes
+cutting bodily away. But, lo! the inherent vanity of Mr. Triplet came
+out strong. Submissively, but obstinately, he fought for the discarded
+beauties. Unluckily, he did this one day that his patroness was in one
+of her bitter humors. So she instantly gave him back his manuscript,
+with a sweet smile owned herself inferior in judgment to him, and left
+him unmolested.
+
+Triplet breathed freely; a weight was taken off him. The savage steel
+(he applied this title to the actress's scissors) had spared his
+_purpurei panni._ He was played, pure and intact, a calamity the rest of
+us grumbling escape.
+
+But it did so happen that the audience were of the actress's mind, and
+found the words too exuberant, and the business of the play too scanty
+in proportion. At last their patience was so sorely tried that they
+supplied one striking incident to a piece deficient in facts. They gave
+the manager the usual broad hint, and in the middle of Triplet's third
+act a huge veil of green baize descended upon "The Jealous Spaniard."
+
+Failing here, Mrs. Woffington contrived often to befriend him in his
+other arts, and moreover she often sent Mr. Triplet what she called a
+snug investment, a loan of ten pounds, to be repaid at Doomsday, with
+interest and compound interest, according to the Scriptures; and,
+although she laughed, she secretly believed she was to get her ten
+pounds back, double and treble. And I believe so too.
+
+Some years later Mrs. Triplet became eventful. She fell ill, and lay
+a dying; but one fine morning, after all hope had been given up, she
+suddenly rose and dressed herself. She was quite well in body now, but
+insane.
+
+She continued in this state a month, and then, by God's mercy, she
+recovered her reason; but now the disease fell another step, and lighted
+upon her temper--a more athletic vixen was not to be found. She had
+spoiled Triplet for this by being too tame, so when the dispensation
+came they sparred daily. They were now thoroughly unhappy. They were
+poor as ever, and their benefactress was dead, and they had learned to
+snap. A speculative tour had taken this pair to Bristol, then the second
+city in England. They sojourned in the suburbs.
+
+One morning the postman brought a letter for Triplet, who was showing
+his landlord's boy how to plant onions. (N. B.--Triplet had never
+planted an onion, but he was one of your _a priori_ gentlemen, and could
+show anybody how to do anything.) Triplet held out his hand for the
+letter, but the postman held out his hand for a half crown first. Trip's
+profession had transpired, and his clothes inspired diffidence. Triplet
+appealed to his good feeling.
+
+He replied with exultation, "That he had none left." (A middle-aged
+postman, no doubt.)
+
+Triplet then suddenly started from entreaty to King Cambyses' vein. In
+vain!
+
+Mrs. Triplet came down, and essayed the blandishments of the softer sex.
+In vain! And, as there were no assets, the postman marched off down the
+road.
+
+Mrs. Triplet glided after him like an assassin, beckoning on Triplet,
+who followed, doubtful of her designs. Suddenly (truth compels me to
+relate this) she seized the obdurate official from behind, pinned
+both his arms to his side, and with her nose furiously telegraphed her
+husband.
+
+He, animated by her example, plunged upon the man and tore the letter
+from his hand and opened it before his eyes.
+
+It happened to be a very windy morning, and when he opened the letter an
+inclosure, printed on much finer paper, was caught into the air and went
+down the wind. Triplet followed in kangaroo leaps, like a dancer making
+a flying exit.
+
+The postman cried on all good citizens for help. Some collected and
+laughed at him; Mrs. Triplet explaining that they were poor, and could
+not pay half a crown for the freight of half an ounce of paper. She held
+him convulsively until Triplet reappeared.
+
+That gentleman on his return was ostentatiously calm and dignified. "You
+are, or were, in perturbation about half a crown," said he. "There,
+sir, is a twenty-pound note, oblige me with nineteen pounds seventeen
+shillings and sixpence. Should your resources be unequal to such a
+demand, meet me at the 'Green Cat and Brown Frogs,' after dinner, when
+you shall receive your half-crown, and drink another upon the occasion
+of my sudden accession to unbounded affluence."
+
+The postman was staggered by the sentence and overawed by the note, and
+chose the "Cat and Frogs," and liquid half-crown.
+
+Triplet took his wife down the road and showed her the letter and
+inclosure. The letter ran thus:
+
+"SIR--We beg respectfully to inform you that our late friend and client,
+James Triplet, Merchant, of the Minories, died last August, without a
+will, and that you are his heir.
+
+"His property amounts to about twenty thousand pounds, besides some
+reversions. Having possessed the confidence of your late uncle we
+should feel honored and gratified if you should think us worthy to act
+professionally for yourself.
+
+"We inclose twenty pounds, and beg you will draw upon us as far as five
+thousand pounds, should you have immediate occasion.
+
+"We are, sir,
+
+"Your humble servants,
+
+"JAMES AND JOHN ALLMITT."
+
+It was some time before these children of misfortune could realize this
+enormous stroke of compensation; but at last it worked its way into
+their spirits, and they began to sing, to triumph, and dance upon the
+king's highway.
+
+Mrs. Triplet was the first to pause, and take better views. "Oh, James!"
+she cried, "we have suffered much! we have been poor, but honest, and
+the Almighty has looked upon us at last!"
+
+Then they began to reproach themselves.
+
+"Oh, James! I have been a peevish woman--an ill wife to you, this many
+years!"
+
+"No, no!" cried Triplet, with tears in his eyes. "It is I who have been
+rough and brutal. Poverty tried us too hard; but we were not like the
+rest of them--we were always faithful to the altar. And the Almighty has
+seen us, though we often doubted it."
+
+"I never doubted that, James."
+
+So then the poor things fell on their knees upon the public road, and
+thanked God. If any man had seen them, he would have said they were mad.
+Yet madder things are done every day by gentlemen with faces as grave as
+the parish bull's. And then they rose and formed their little plans.
+
+Triplet was for devoting four-fifths to charity, and living like a
+prince on the remainder. But Mrs. Triplet thought the poor were entitled
+to no more than two-thirds, and they themselves ought to bask in a
+third, to make up for what they had gone through; and then suddenly she
+sighed, and burst into tears. "Lucy! Lucy!" sobbed she.
+
+Yes, reader, God had taken little Lucy! And her mother cried to think
+all this wealth and comfort had come too late for her darling child.
+
+"Do not cry. Lucy is richer, a thousand times, than you are, with your
+twenty thousand pounds."
+
+Their good resolutions were carried out, for a wonder. Triplet lived
+for years, the benefactor of all the loose fish that swim in and round
+theaters; and, indeed, the unfortunate seldom appealed to him in vain.
+He now predominated over the arts, instead of climbing them. In his
+latter day he became an oracle, as far as the science of acting was
+concerned; and, what is far more rare, he really got to know _something_
+about it. This was owing to two circumstances: first, he ceased to run
+blindfold in a groove behind the scenes; second, he became a frequenter
+of the first row of the pit, and that is where the whole critic, and
+two-thirds of the true actor, is made.
+
+On one point, to his dying day, his feelings guided his judgment. He
+never could see an actress equal to his Woffington. Mrs. Abington
+was grace personified, but so was Woffington, said the old man: and
+Abington's voice is thin, Woffington's was sweet and mellow. When Jordan
+rose, with her voice of honey, her dewy freshness, and her heavenly
+laugh, that melted in along with her words, like the gold in the quartz,
+Triplet was obliged to own her the goddess of beautiful gayety; but
+still he had the last word: "Woffington was all _she_ is, except her
+figure. Woffington was a Hebe; your Nell Jordan is little better than a
+dowdy."
+
+Triplet almost reached the present century. He passed through great
+events, but they did not excite him; his eye was upon the arts. When
+Napoleon drew his conquering sword on England, Triplet's remark was:
+"Now we shall be driven upon native talent, thank Heaven!" The storms
+of Europe shook not Triplet. The fact is, nothing that happened on the
+great stage of the world seemed real to him. He believed in nothing
+where there was no curtain visible. But even the grotesque are not good
+in vain. Many an eye was wet round his dying bed, and many a tear fell
+upon his grave. He made his final exit in the year of grace 1799. And I,
+who laugh at him, would leave this world to-day to be with him; for I am
+tossing at sea--he is in port.
+
+*****
+
+A straightforward character like Mabel's becomes a firm character
+with years. Long ere she was forty, her hand gently but steadily ruled
+Willoughby House, and all in it. She and Mr. Vane lived very happily; he
+gave her no fresh cause for uneasiness. Six months after their return,
+she told him what burned in that honest heart of hers, the truth about
+Mrs. Woffington. The water rushed to his eyes, but his heart was now
+wholly his wife's; and gratitude to Mrs. Woffington for her noble
+conduct was the only sentiment awakened.
+
+"You must repay her, dearest," said he. "I know you love her, and until
+to-day it gave me pain; now it gives me pleasure. We owe her much."
+
+The happy, innocent life of Mabel Vane is soon summed up. Frank as the
+day, constant as the sun, pure as the dew, she passed the golden years
+preparing herself and others for a still brighter eternity. At home, it
+was she who warmed and cheered the house, and the hearth, more than all
+Christmas fires. Abroad, she shone upon the poor like the sun. She led
+her beloved husband by the hand to Heaven. She led her children the same
+road; and she was leading her grandchildren when the angel of death came
+for her; and she slept in peace.
+
+Many remember her. For she alone, of all our tale, lived in this present
+century; but they speak of her as "old Madam Vane"--her whom we knew so
+young and fresh.
+
+She lies in Willoughby Church--her mortal part; her spirit is with the
+spirits of our mothers and sisters, reader, that are gone before us;
+with the tender mothers, the chaste wives, the loyal friends, and the
+just women of all ages.
+
+RESURGET.
+
+I come to her last, who went first; but I could not have stayed by the
+others, when once I had laid my darling asleep. It seemed for a while as
+if the events of our tale did her harm; but it was not so in the end.
+
+Not many years afterward, she was engaged by Mr. Sheridan, at a very
+heavy salary, and went to Dublin. Here the little girl, who had often
+carried a pitcher on her head down to the Liffey, and had played Polly
+Peachum in a booth, became a lion; dramatic, political and literary, and
+the center of the wit of that wittiest of cities.
+
+But the Dublin ladies and she did not coalesce. They said she was a
+naughty woman, and not fit for them morally. She said they had but two
+topics, "silks and scandal," and were unfit for her intellectually.
+
+This was the saddest part of her history. But it is darkest just before
+sunrise. She returned to London. Not long after, it so happened that she
+went to a small church in the city one Sunday afternoon. The preacher
+was such as we have often heard; but not so this poor woman, in her day
+of sapless theology, ere John Wesley waked the snoring church. Instead
+of sending a dry clatter of morality about their ears, or evaporating
+the Bible in the thin generalities of the pulpit, this man drove God's
+truths home to the hearts of men and women. In his hands the divine
+virtues were thunderbolts, not swans' down. With good sense, plain
+speaking, and a heart yearning for the souls of his brethren and his
+sisters, he stormed the bosoms of many; and this afternoon, as he
+reasoned like Paul of righteousness, temperance, and judgment to come,
+sinners trembled--and Margaret Woffington was of those who trembled.
+
+After this day, she came ever to the narrow street where shone this
+house of God; and still new light burst upon her heart and conscience.
+Here she learned why she was unhappy; here she learned how alone she
+could be happy; here she learned to know herself; and, the moment she
+knew herself, she abhorred herself, and repented in dust and ashes.
+
+This strong and straightforward character made no attempt to reconcile
+two things that an average Christian would have continued to reconcile.
+Her interest fell in a moment before her new sense of right. She flung
+her profession from her like a poisonous weed.
+
+Long before this, Mrs. Vane had begged her to leave the stage. She had
+replied, that it was to her what wine is to weak stomachs. "But," added
+she, "do not fear that I will ever crawl down hill, and unravel my own
+reputation; nor will I ever do as I have seen others--stand groaning at
+the wing, to go on giggling and come off gasping. No! the first night
+the boards do not spring beneath my feet, and the pulse of the public
+beat under my hand, I am gone! Next day, at rehearsal, instead
+of Woffington, a note will come, to tell the manager that
+henceforth Woffington is herself--at Twickenham, or Richmond, or
+Harrow-on-the-Hill, far from his dust, his din, and his glare--quiet,
+till God takes her. Amid grass, and flowers, and charitable deeds."
+
+This day had not come. It was in the zenith of her charms and her fame
+that she went home one night after a play, and never entered a theater,
+by the front door or back door, again. She declined all leave-taking and
+ceremony.
+
+"When a publican shuts up shop and ceases to diffuse liquid poison, he
+does not invite the world to put up the shutters; neither will I.
+Actors overrate themselves ridiculously," added she; "I am not of that
+importance to the world, nor the world to me. I fling away a dirty old
+glove instead of soiling my fingers filling it with more guineas, and
+the world loses in me, what? another old glove, full of words; half
+of them idle, the rest wicked, untrue, silly, or impure. _Rougissons,
+taisons-nous, et partons."_
+
+She now changed her residence, and withdrew politely from her old
+associates, courting two classes only, the good and the poor. She had
+always supported her mother and sister; but now charity became her
+system. The following is characteristic:
+
+A gentleman who had greatly admired this dashing actress met one day, in
+the suburbs, a lady in an old black silk gown and a gray shawl, with a
+large basket on her arm. She showed him its contents--worsted stockings
+of prodigious thickness--which she was carrying to some of her
+_proteges._
+
+"But surely that is a waste of your valuable time," remonstrated her
+admirer. "Much better buy them."
+
+"But, my good soul," replied the representative of Sir Harry Wildair,
+"you can't buy them. Nobody in this wretched town can knit worsted hose
+except Woffington."
+
+Conversions like this are open to just suspicion, and some did not fail
+to confound her with certain great sinners, who have turned austere
+self-deceivers when sin smiled no more. But this was mere conjecture.
+The facts were clear, and speaking to the contrary. This woman left
+folly at its brightest, and did not become austere. On the contrary,
+though she laughed less, she was observed to smile far oftener than
+before. She was a humble and penitent, but cheerful, hopeful Christian.
+
+Another class of detractors took a somewhat opposite ground. They
+accused her of bigotry for advising a young female friend against the
+stage as a business. But let us hear herself. This is what she said to
+the girl:
+
+"At the bottom of my heart, I always loved and honored virtue. Yet the
+tendencies of the stage so completely overcame my good sentiments that
+I was for years a worthless woman. It is a situation of uncommon and
+incessant temptation. Ask yourself, my child, whether there is nothing
+else you can do, but this. It is, I think, our duty and our wisdom to
+fly temptation whenever we can, as it is to resist it when we cannot
+escape it."
+
+Was this the tone of bigotry?
+
+Easy in fortune, penitent, but cheerful, Mrs. Woffington had now but one
+care--to efface the memory of her former self, and to give as many years
+to purity and piety as had gone to folly and frailty. This was not
+to be! The Almighty did not permit, or perhaps I should say, did not
+require this.
+
+Some unpleasant symptoms had long attracted her notice, but in the
+bustle of her profession had received little attention. She was now
+persuaded by her own medical attendant to consult Dr. Bowdler, who had a
+great reputation, and had been years ago an acquaintance and an admirer.
+He visited her, he examined her by means little used in that day, and he
+saw at once that her days were numbered.
+
+Dr. Bowdler's profession and experience had not steeled his heart as
+they generally do and must do. He could not tell her this sad news, so
+he asked her for pen and paper, and said, I will write a prescription
+to Mr. ----. He then wrote, not a prescription, but a few lines, begging
+Mr. ---- to convey the cruel intelligence by degrees, and with care and
+tenderness. "It is all we can do for her," said he.
+
+He looked so grave while writing the supposed prescription, that it
+unluckily occurred to Mrs. Woffington to look over him. She stole archly
+behind him, and, with a smile on her face--read her death warrant.
+
+It was a cruel stroke! A gasping sigh broke from her. At this Dr.
+Bowdler looked up, and to his horror saw the sweet face he had doomed
+to the tomb looking earnestly and anxiously at him, and very pale and
+grave. He was shocked, and, strange to say, she, whose death-warrant
+he had signed, ran and brought him a glass of wine, for he was quite
+overcome. Then she gave him her hand in her own sweet way, and bade him
+not grieve for her, for she was not afraid to die, and had long learned
+that "life is a walking shadow, a poor, poor player, who frets and
+struts his hour upon the stage, and then is heard no more."
+
+But no sooner was the doctor gone than she wept bitterly. Poor soul!
+she had set her heart upon living as many years to God as she had to the
+world, and she had hoped to wipe out her former self.
+
+"Alas!" she said to her sister, "I have done more harm than I can ever
+hope to good now; and my long life of folly and wickedness will be
+remembered--will be what they call famous; my short life of repentance
+who will know, or heed, or take to profit?"
+
+But she soon ceased to repine. She bowed to the will of Heaven, and set
+her house in order, and awaited her summons. The tranquillity of her
+life and her courageous spirit were unfavorable to the progress of
+disease, and I am glad to say she was permitted to live nearly three
+years after this, and these three years were the happiest period of her
+whole life. Works of piety and love made the days eventful. She was at
+home now--she had never been at home in folly and loose living. All her
+bitterness was gone now, with its cause.
+
+Reader, it was with her as it is with many an autumn day; clouds darken
+the sun, rain and wind sweep over all--till day declines. But then comes
+one heavenly hour, when all ill things seem spent. There is no more
+wind, no more rain. The great sun comes forth--not fiery bright indeed,
+but full of tranquil glory, and warms the sky with ruby waves, and the
+hearts of men with hope, as, parting with us for a little space, he
+glides slowly and peacefully to rest.
+
+So fared it with this humble, penitent, and now happy Christian.
+
+A part of her desire was given her. She lived long enough to read a firm
+recantation of her former self, to show the world a great repentance,
+and to leave upon indelible record one more proof, what alone is true
+wisdom, and where alone true joys are to be found.
+
+She endured some physical pain, as all must who die in their prime. But
+this never wrung a sigh from her great heart; and within she had the
+peace of God, which passes all understanding.
+
+I am not strong enough to follow her to her last hour; nor is it needed.
+Enough that her own words came true. When the great summons came, it
+found her full of hope, and peace, and joy; sojourning, not dwelling,
+upon earth; far from dust and din and vice; the Bible in her hand,
+the Cross in her heart; quiet; amid grass, and flowers, and charitable
+deeds.
+
+"NON OMNEM MORITURAM."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Peg Woffington, by Charles Reade
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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of Peg Woffington, by Charles Reade
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+
+
+
+
+
+Etext by James Rusk, jrusk@mac-email.com. Italics are indicated by the
+underscore character (_). Accent marks in are ignored.
+
+
+
+
+
+Peg Woffington
+
+by Charles Reade
+
+
+
+
+To T. Taylor, Esq., my friend, and coadjutor in the comedy of "Masks and
+Faces," to whom the reader owes much of the best matter in this tale: and
+to the memory of Margaret Woffington, falsely _summed up_ until to-day,
+this "Dramatic Story" is inscribed by CHARLES READE.--
+
+LONDON. Dec. 15, 1852.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+ABOUT the middle of the last century, at eight o'clock in the evening, in
+a large but poor apartment, a man was slumbering on a rough couch. His
+rusty and worn suit of black was of a piece with his uncarpeted room, the
+deal table of home manufacture, and its slim unsnuffed candle.
+
+The man was Triplet, scene painter, actor and writer of sanguinary plays,
+in which what ought to be, viz., truth, plot, situation and dialogue,
+were not; and what ought not to be, were--_scilicet,_ small talk, big
+talk, fops, ruffians, and ghosts.
+
+His three mediocrities fell so short of one talent that he was sometimes
+_impransus._
+
+He slumbered, but uneasily; the dramatic author was uppermost, and his
+"Demon of the Hayloft" hung upon the thread of popular favor.
+
+On his uneasy slumber entered from the theater Mrs. Triplet.
+
+She was a lady who in one respect fell behind her husband; she lacked his
+variety in ill-doing, but she recovered herself by doing her one thing a
+shade worse than he did any of his three. She was what is called in grim
+sport an actress; she had just cast her mite of discredit on royalty by
+playing the Queen, and had trundled home the moment the breath was out of
+her royal body. She came in rotatory with fatigue, and fell, gristle,
+into a chair; she wrenched from her brow a diadem and eyed it with
+contempt, took from her pocket a sausage, and contemplated it with
+respect and affection, placed it in a frying-pan on the fire, and entered
+her bedroom, meaning to don a loose wrapper, and dethrone herself into
+comfort.
+
+But the poor woman was shot walking by Morpheus, and subsided altogether;
+for dramatic performances, amusing and exciting to youth seated in the
+pit, convey a certain weariness to those bright beings who sparkle on the
+stage for bread and cheese.
+
+Royalty, disposed of, still left its trail of events. The sausage began
+to "spit." The sound was hardly out of its body, when poor Triplet
+writhed like a worm on a hook. "Spitter, spittest," went the sausage.
+Triplet groaned, and at last his inarticulate murmurs became words:
+"That's right, pit now, that is so reasonable to condemn a poor fellow's
+play before you have heard it out." Then, with a change of tone, "Tom,"
+muttered he, "they are losing their respect for specters; if they do,
+hunger will make a ghost of me." Next he fancied the clown or somebody
+had got into his ghost's costume.
+
+"Dear," said the poor dreamer, "the clown makes a very pretty specter,
+with his ghastly white face, and his blood-boltered cheeks and nose. I
+never saw the fun of a clown before, no! no! no! it is not the clown, it
+is worse, much worse; oh, dear, ugh!" and Triplet rolled off the couch
+like Richard the Third. He sat a moment on the floor, with a finger in
+each eye; and then, finding he was neither daubing, ranting, nor deluging
+earth with "acts," he accused himself of indolence, and sat down to write
+a small tale of blood and bombast; he took his seat at the deal table
+with some alacrity, for he had recently made a discovery.
+
+How to write well, _rien que cela._
+
+"First, think in as homely a way as you can; next, shove your pen under
+the
+
+ thought, and lift it by polysyllables to the true level of fiction"
+(when done, find a publisher--if you can). "This," said Triplet, "insures
+common sense to your ideas, which does pretty well for a basis," said
+Triplet, apologetically, "and elegance to the dress they wear." Triplet,
+then casting his eyes round in search of such actual circumstances as
+could be incorporated on this plan with fiction, began to work thus:
+
+ TRIPLET'S FACTS. TRIPLET'S FICTION.
+
+A farthing dip is on the table. A solitary candle cast its pale
+ gleams around.
+
+It wants snuffing. Its elongated wick betrayed an owner
+ steeped in oblivion.
+
+
+He jumped up, and snuffed it He rose languidly, and trimmed it with
+his fingers. Burned his with an instrument that he had by his
+fingers, and swore a little. side for that purpose, and muttered a
+ silent ejaculation
+
+
+Before, however, the mole Triplet could undermine literature and level it
+with the dust, various interruptions and divisions broke in upon his
+design, and _sic nos servavit_ Apollo. As he wrote the last sentence, a
+loud rap came to his door. A servant in livery brought him a note from
+Mr. Vane, dated Covent Garden. Triplet's eyes sparkled, he bustled,
+wormed himself into a less rusty coat, and started off to the Theater
+Royal, Covent Garden.
+
+In those days, the artists of the pen and the brush ferreted patrons,
+instead of aiming to be indispensable to the public, the only patron
+worth a single gesture of the quill.
+
+Mr. Vane had conversed with Triplet, that is, let Triplet talk to him in
+a coffee-house, and Triplet, the most sanguine of unfortunate men, had
+already built a series of expectations upon that interview, when this
+note arrived. Leaving him on his road from Lambeth to Covent Garden, we
+must introduce more important personages.
+
+Mr. Vane was a wealthy gentleman from Shropshire, whom business had
+called to London four months ago, and now pleasure detained. Business
+still occupied the letters he sent now and then to his native county; but
+it had ceased to occupy the writer. He was a man of learning and taste,
+as times went; and his love of the Arts had taken him some time before
+our tale to the theaters, then the resort of all who pretended to taste;
+and it was thus he had become fascinated by Mrs. Woffington, a lady of
+great beauty, and a comedian high in favor with the town.
+
+The first night he saw her was an epoch in the history of this
+gentleman's mind. He had learning and refinement, and he had not great
+practical experience, and such men are most open to impression from the
+stage. He saw a being, all grace and bright nature, move like a goddess
+among the stiff puppets of the scene; her glee and her pathos were
+equally catching, she held a golden key at which all the doors of the
+heart flew open. Her face, too, was as full of goodness as
+intelligence--it was like no other farce; the heart bounded to meet it.
+
+He rented a box at her theater. He was there every night before the
+curtain drew up; and I'm sorry to say, he at last took half a dislike to
+Sunday--Sunday "which knits up the raveled sleave of care," Sunday "tired
+nature's sweet restorer," because on Sunday there was no Peg Woffington.
+At first he regarded her as a being of another sphere, an incarnation of
+poetry and art; but by degrees his secret aspirations became bolder. She
+was a woman; there were men who knew her; some of them inferior to him in
+position, and, he flattered himself, in mind. He had even heard a tale
+against her character. To him her face was its confutation, and he knew
+how loose-tongued is calumny; but still-- !
+
+At last, one day he sent her a letter, unsigned. This letter expressed
+his admiration of her talent in warm but respectful terms; the writer
+told her it had become necessary to his heart to return her in some way
+his thanks for the land of enchantment to which she had introduced him.
+Soon after this, choice flowers found their way to her dressing-room
+every night, and now and then verses and precious stones mingled with her
+roses and eglantine. And oh, how he watched the great actress's eye all
+the night; how he tried to discover whether she looked oftener toward his
+box than the corresponding box on the other side of the house. Did she
+notice him, or did she not? What a point gained, if she was conscious of
+his nightly attendance. She would feel he was a friend, not a mere
+auditor. He was jealous of the pit, on whom Mrs. Woffington lavished her
+smiles without measure.
+
+At last, one day he sent her a wreath of flowers, and implored her, if
+any word he had said to her had pleased or interested her, to wear this
+wreath that night. After he had done this he trembled; he had courted a
+decision, when, perhaps, his safety lay in patience and time. She made
+her _entree;_ he turned cold as she glided into sight from the prompter's
+side; he raised his eyes slowly and fearfully from her feet to her head;
+her head was bare, wreathed only by its own rich glossy honors. "Fool!"
+thought he, "to think she would hang frivolities upon that glorious head
+for me." Yet his disappointment told him he had really hoped it; he would
+not have sat out the play but for a leaden incapacity of motion that
+seized him.
+
+The curtain drew up for the fifth act, and!--could he believe his
+eyes?--Mrs. Woffington stood upon the stage with his wreath upon her
+graceful head. She took away his breath. She spoke the epilogue, and, as
+the curtain fell, she lifted her eyes, he thought, to his box, and made
+him a distinct, queen-like courtesy; his heart fluttered to his mouth,
+and he walked home on wings and tiptoe. In short--
+
+Mrs. Woffington, as an actress, justified a portion of this enthusiasm;
+she was one of the truest artists of her day; a fine lady in her hands
+was a lady, with the genteel affectation of a gentlewoman, not a harlot's
+affectation, which is simply and without exaggeration what the stage
+commonly gives us for a fine lady; an old woman in her hands was a
+thorough woman, thoroughly old, not a cackling young person of epicene
+gender. She played Sir Harry Wildair like a man, which is how he ought to
+be played (or, which is better still, not at all), so that Garrick
+acknowledged her as a male rival, and abandoned the part he no longer
+monopolized.
+
+Now it very, very rarely happens that a woman of her age is high enough
+in art and knowledge to do these things. In players, vanity cripples art
+at every step. The young actress who is not a Woffington aims to display
+herself by means of her part, which is vanity; not to raise her part by
+sinking herself in it, which is art. It has been my misfortune to see
+----, and----, and ----, et ceteras, play the man; Nature, forgive them,
+if you can, for art never will; they never reached any idea more manly
+than a steady resolve to exhibit the points of a woman with greater
+ferocity than they could in a gown. But consider, ladies, a man is not
+the meanest of the brute creation, so how can he be an unwomanly female?
+This sort of actress aims not to give her author's creation to the
+public, but to trot out the person instead of the creation, and shows
+sots what a calf it has--and is.
+
+Vanity, vanity! all is vanity! Mesdames les Charlatanes.
+
+Margaret Woffington was of another mold; she played the ladies of high
+comedy with grace, distinction, and delicacy. But in Sir Harry Wildair
+she parted with a woman's mincing foot and tongue, and played the man in
+a style large, spirited and _elance._ As Mrs. Day (committee) she painted
+wrinkles on her lovely face so honestly that she was taken for
+threescore, and she carried out the design with voice and person, and did
+a vulgar old woman to the life. She disfigured her own beauties to show
+the beauty of her art; in a word, she was an artist! It does not follow
+she was the greatest artist that ever breathed; far from it. Mr. Vane was
+carried to this notion by passion and ignorance.
+
+On the evening of our tale he was at his post patiently sitting out one
+of those sanguinary discourses our rude forefathers thought were tragic
+plays. _Sedet aeternumque Sedebit Infelix Theseus,_ because Mrs.
+Woffington is to speak the epilogue.
+
+These epilogues were curiosities of the human mind; they whom, just to
+ourselves and _them,_ we call our _forbears, _ had an idea their blood
+and bombast were not ridiculous enough in themselves, so when the curtain
+had fallen on the _debris_ of the _dramatis personae,_ and of common
+sense, they sent on an actress to turn all the sentiment so laboriously
+acquired into a jest.
+
+To insist that nothing good or beautiful shall be carried safe from a
+play out into the street was the bigotry of English horseplay. Was a
+Lucretia the heroine of the tragedy, she was careful in the epilogue to
+speak like Messalina. Did a king's mistress come to hunger and
+repentance, she disinfected all the _petites maitresses_ in the house of
+the moral, by assuring them that sin is a joke, repentance a greater, and
+that she individually was ready for either if they would but cry, laugh
+and pay. Then the audience used to laugh, and if they did not, lo! the
+manager, actor and author of heroic tragedy were exceeding sorrowful.
+
+While sitting attendance on the epilogue Mr. Vane had nothing to distract
+him from the congregation but a sanguinary sermon in five heads, so his
+eyes roved over the pews, and presently he became aware of a familiar
+face watching him closely. The gentleman to whom it belonged finding
+himself recognized left his seat, and a minute later Sir Charles Pomander
+entered Mr. Vane's box.
+
+This Sir Charles Pomander was a gentleman of vice; pleasure he called it.
+Mr. Vane had made his acquaintance two years ago in Shropshire. Sir
+Charles, who husbanded everything except his soul, had turned himself out
+to grass for a month. His object was, by roast mutton, bread with some
+little flour in it, air, water, temperance, chastity and peace, to be
+enabled to take a deeper plunge into impurities of food and morals.
+
+A few nights ago, unseen by Mr. Vane, he had observed him in the theater;
+an ordinary man would have gone at once and shaken hands with him, but
+this was not an ordinary man, this was a diplomatist. First of all, he
+said to himself: "What is this man doing here?" Then he soon discovered
+this man must be in love with some actress; then it became his business
+to know who she was; this, too, soon betrayed itself. Then it became more
+than ever Sir Charles's business to know whether Mrs. Woffington returned
+the sentiment; and here his penetration was at fault, for the moment; he
+determined, however, to discover.
+
+Mr. Vane then received his friend, all unsuspicious how that friend had
+been skinning him with his eyes for some time past. After the usual
+compliments had passed between two gentlemen who had been hand and glove
+for a month and forgotten each other's existence for two years, Sir
+Charles, still keeping in view his design, said:
+
+"Let us go upon the stage." The fourth act had just concluded.
+
+"Go upon the stage!" said Mr. Vane; "what, where she--I mean among the
+actors?"
+
+"Yes; come into the green-room. There are one or two people of reputation
+there; I will introduce you to them, if you please."
+
+"Go upon the stage!" why, if it had been proposed to him to go to heaven
+he would not have been more astonished. He was too astonished at first to
+realize the full beauty of the arrangement, by means of which he might be
+within a yard of Mrs. Woffington, might feel her dress rustle past him,
+might speak to her, might drink her voice fresh from her lips almost
+before it mingled with meaner air. Silence gives consent, and Mr. Vane,
+though he thought a great deal, said nothing; so Pomander rose, and they
+left the boxes together. He led the way to the stage door, which was
+opened obsequiously to him; they then passed through a dismal passage,
+and suddenly emerged upon that scene of enchantment, the stage--a dirty
+platform encumbered on all sides with piles of scenery in flats. They
+threaded their way through rusty velvet actors and fustian carpenters,
+and entered the green-room. At the door of this magic chamber Vane
+trembled and half wished he could retire. They entered; his apprehension
+gave way to disappointment, she was not there. Collecting himself, he was
+presently introduced to a smart, jaunty, and, to do him justice,
+_distingue_ old beau. This was Colley Cibber, Esq., poet laureate, and
+retired actor and dramatist, a gentleman who is entitled to a word or
+two.
+
+This Cibber was the only actor since Shakespeare's time who had both
+acted and written well. Pope's personal resentment misleads the reader of
+English poetry as to Cibber's real place among the wits of the day.
+
+The man's talent was dramatic, not didactic, or epic, or pastoral. Pope
+was not so deep in the drama as in other matters, and Cibber was one of
+its luminaries; be wrote some of the best comedies of his day. He also
+succeeded where Dryden, for lack of true dramatic taste, failed. He
+tampered successfully with Shakespeare. Colley Cibber's version of
+"Richard the Third" is impudent and slightly larcenic, but it is
+marvelously effective. It has stood a century, and probably will stand
+forever; and the most admired passages in what literary humbugs who
+pretend they know Shakespeare by the closet, not the stage, accept as
+Shakespeare's " Richard," are Cibber's.
+
+Mr. Cibber was now in private life, a mild edition of his own Lord
+Foppington; he had none of the snob-fop as represented on our
+conventional stage; nobody ever had, and lived. He was in tolerably good
+taste; but he went ever gold-laced, highly powdered, scented, and
+diamonded, dispensing graceful bows, praises of whoever had the good luck
+to be dead, and satire of all who were here to enjoy it.
+
+Mr. Vane, to whom the drama had now become the golden branch of letters,
+looked with some awe on this veteran, for he had seen many Woffingtons.
+He fell soon upon the subject nearest his heart. He asked Mr. Cibber what
+he thought of Mrs. Woffington. The old gentleman thought well of the
+young lady's talent, especially her comedy; in tragedy, said he, she
+imitates Mademoiselle Dumenil, of the Theatre Francais, and confounds the
+stage rhetorician with the actress. The next question was not so
+fortunate. "Did you ever see so great and true an actress upon the
+whole?"
+
+Mr. Cibber opened his eyes, a slight flush came into his wash-leather
+face, and he replied: "I have not only seen many equal, many superior to
+her, but I have seen some half dozen who would have eaten her up and spit
+her out again, and not known they had done anything out of the way."
+
+Here Pomander soothed the veteran's dudgeon by explaining in dulcet tones
+that his friend was not long from Shropshire, and-- The critic
+interrupted him, and bade him not dilute the excuse.
+
+Now Mr. Vane had as much to say as either of them, but he had not the
+habit, which dramatic folks have, of carrying his whole bank in his
+cheek-pocket, so they quenched him for two minutes.
+
+But lovers are not silenced, he soon returned to the attack; he dwelt on
+the grace, the ease, the freshness, the intelligence, the universal
+beauty of Mrs. Woffington. Pomander sneered, to draw him out. Cibber
+smiled, with good-natured superiority. This nettled the young gentleman,
+he fired up, his handsome countenance glowed, he turned Demosthenes for
+her he loved. One advantage he had over both Cibber and Pomander, a fair
+stock of classical learning; on this he now drew.
+
+"Other actors and actresses," said he, "are monotonous in voice,
+monotonous in action, but Mrs. Woffington's delivery has the compass and
+variety of nature, and her movements are free from the stale uniformity
+that distinguishes artifice from art. The others seem to me to have but
+two dreams of grace, a sort of crawling on stilts is their motion, and an
+angular stiffness their repose." He then cited the most famous statues of
+antiquity, and quoted situations in plays where, by her fine dramatic
+instinct, Mrs. Woffington, he said, threw her person into postures
+similar to these, and of equal beauty; not that she strikes attitudes
+like the rest, but she melts from one beautiful statue into another; and,
+if sculptors could gather from her immortal graces, painters, too, might
+take from her face the beauties that belong of right to passion and
+thought, and orators might revive their withered art, and learn from
+those golden lips the music of old Athens, that quelled tempestuous mobs,
+and princes drunk with victory.
+
+Much as this was, he was going to say more, ever so much more, but he
+became conscious of a singular sort of grin upon every face; this grin
+made him turn rapidly round to look for its cause. It explained itself at
+once; at his very elbow was a lady, whom his heart recognized, though her
+back was turned to him. She was dressed in a rich silk gown, pearl white,
+with flowers and sprigs embroidered; her beautiful white neck and arms
+were bare. She was sweeping up the room with the epilogue in her hand,
+learning it off by heart; at the other end of the room she turned, and
+now she shone full upon him.
+
+It certainly was a dazzling creature. She had a head of beautiful form,
+perched like a bird upon a throat massive yet shapely and smooth as a
+column of alabaster, a symmetrical brow, black eyes full of fire and
+tenderness, a delicious mouth, with a hundred varying expressions, and
+that marvelous faculty of giving beauty alike to love or scorn, a sneer
+or a smile. But she had one feature more remarkable than all, her
+eyebrows -- the actor's feature; they were jet black, strongly marked,
+and in repose were arched like a rainbow; but it was their extraordinary
+flexibility which made other faces upon the stage look sleepy beside
+Margaret Woffington's. In person she was considerably above the middle
+height, and so finely formed that one could not determine the exact
+character of her figure. At one time it seemed all stateliness, at
+another time elegance personified, and flowing voluptuousness at another.
+She was Juno, Psyche, Hebe, by turns, and for aught we know at will.
+
+It must be confessed that a sort of halo of personal grandeur surrounds a
+great actress. A scene is set; half a dozen nobodies are there lost in
+it, because they are and seem lumps of nothing. The great artist steps
+upon that scene, and how she fills it in a moment! Mind and majesty wait
+upon her in the air; her person is lost in the greatness of her personal
+presence; she dilates with _thought,_ and a stupid giantess looks a dwarf
+beside her.
+
+No wonder then that Mr. Vane felt overpowered by this torch in a closet.
+To vary the metaphor, it seemed to him, as she swept up and down, as if
+the green-room was a shell, and this glorious creature must burst it and
+be free. Meantime, the others saw a pretty actress studying her business;
+and Cibber saw a dramatic school-girl learning what he presumed to be a
+very silly set of words. Sir C. Pomander's eye had been on her the moment
+she entered, and he watched keenly the effect of Vane's eloquent eulogy;
+but apparently the actress was too deep in her epilogue for anything
+else. She came in, saying, "Mum, mum, mum," over her task, and she went
+on doing so. The experienced Mr. Cibber, who had divined Vane in an
+instant, drew him into a corner, and complimented him on his well-timed
+eulogy.
+
+"You acted that mighty well, sir," said he. "Stop my vitals! if I did not
+think you were in earnest, till I saw the jade had slipped in among us.
+It told, sir--it told."
+
+Up fired Vane. "What do you mean, sir?" said he. "Do you suppose my
+admiration of that lady is feigned?"
+
+"No need to speak so loud, sir," replied the old gentleman; "she hears
+you. These hussies have ears like hawks."
+
+He then dispensed a private wink and a public bow; with which he strolled
+away from Mr. Vane, and walked feebly and jauntily up the room, whistling
+"Fair Hebe;" fixing his eye upon the past, and somewhat ostentatiously
+overlooking the existence of the present company.
+
+There is no great harm in an old gentleman whistling, but there are two
+ways of doing it; and as this old beau did it, it seemed not unlike a
+small cock-a-doodle-doo of general defiance; and the denizens of the
+green-room, swelled now to a considerable number by the addition of all
+the ladies and gentlemen who had been killed in the fourth act, or whom
+the buttery-fingered author could not keep in hand until the fall of the
+curtain, felt it as such; and so they were not sorry when Mrs.
+Woffington, looking up from her epilogue, cast a glance upon the old
+beau, waited for him, and walked parallel with him on the other side of
+the room, giving an absurdly exact imitation of his carriage and
+deportment. To make this more striking, she pulled out of her pocket,
+after a mock search, a huge paste ring, gazed on it with a ludicrous
+affectation of simple wonder, stuck it, like Cibber's diamond, on her
+little finger, and, pursing up her mouth, proceeded to whistle a quick
+movement,
+
+"Which, by some devilish cantrip sleight,"
+
+played round the old beau's slow movement, without being at variance with
+it. As for the character of this ladylike performance, it was clear,
+brilliant, and loud as blacksmith.
+
+The folk laughed; Vane was shocked. "She profanes herself by whistling,"
+thought he. Mr. Cibber was confounded. He appeared to have no idea whence
+came this sparkling adagio. He looked round, placed his hands to his
+ears, and left off whistling. So did his musical accomplice.
+
+"Gentlemen," said Cibber, with pathetic gravity, "the wind howls most
+dismally this evening! I took it for a drunken shoemaker!"
+
+At this there was a roar of laughter, except from Mr. Vane. Peg
+Woffington laughed as merrily as the others, and showed a set of teeth
+that were really dazzling; but all in one moment, without the
+preliminaries an ordinary countenance requires, this laughing Venus
+pulled a face gloomy beyond conception. Down came her black brows
+straight as a line, and she cast a look of bitter reproach on all
+present; resuming her study, as who should say, "Are ye not ashamed to
+divert a poor girl from her epilogue?" And then she went on, "Mum! mum!
+mum!" casting off ever and anon resentful glances; and this made the
+fools laugh again.
+
+The Laureate was now respectfully addressed by one of his admirers, James
+Quin, the Falstaff of the day, and the rival at this time of Garrick in
+tragic characters, though the general opinion was, that he could not long
+maintain a standing against the younger genius and his rising school of
+art.
+
+Off the stage, James Quin was a character; his eccentricities were
+three--a humorist, a glutton and an honest man; traits that often caused
+astonishment and ridicule, especially the last.
+
+"May we not hope for something from Mr. Cibber's pen after so long a
+silence?"
+
+"No," was the considerate reply. "Who have ye got to play it?"
+
+"Plenty," said Quin; "there's your humble servant, there's--"
+
+"Humility at the head of the list," cried she of the epilogue. "Mum! mum!
+mum!"
+
+Vane thought this so sharp.
+
+"Garrick, Barry, Macklin, Kitty Clive here at my side, Mrs. Cibber, the
+best tragic actress I ever saw; and Woffington, who is as good a comedian
+as you ever saw, sir;" and Quin turned as red as fire.
+
+"Keep your temper, Jemmy," said Mrs. Woffington with a severe accent.
+"Mum! mum! mum!"
+
+"You misunderstand my question," replied Cibber, calmly; "I know your
+_dramatis personae_ but where the devil are your actors?"
+
+Here was a blow.
+
+"The public," said Quin, in some agitation, "would snore if we acted as
+they did in your time."
+
+"How do you know that, sir?" was the supercilious rejoinder; _"you never
+tried!"_
+
+Mr. Quin was silenced. Peg Woffington looked off her epilogue.
+
+"Bad as we are," said she coolly, "we might be worse."
+
+Mr. Cibber turned round, slightly raised his eyebrows.
+
+"Indeed!" said he. "Madam!" added he, with a courteous smile, "will you
+be kind enough to explain to me how you could be worse!"
+
+"If, like a crab, we could go backward!"
+
+At this the auditors tittered; and Mr. Cibber had recourse to his
+spy-glass.
+
+This gentleman was satirical or insolent, as the case might demand, in
+three degrees, of which the snuff-box was the comparative, and the
+spy-glass the superlative. He had learned this on the stage; in
+annihilating Quin he had just used the snuff weapon, and now he drew his
+spy-glass upon poor Peggy.
+
+"Whom have we here?" said he. Then he looked with his spy-glass to see.
+Oh, the little Irish orange-girl!"
+
+"Whose basket outweighed Colley Cibber's salary for the first twenty
+years of his dramatic career," was the delicate reply to the above
+delicate remark. It staggered him for a moment; however, he affected a
+most puzzled air, then gradually allowed a light to steal into his
+features.
+
+"Eh! ah! oh! how stupid I am; I understand; you sold something besides
+oranges!"
+
+"Oh!" said Mr. Vane, and colored up to the temples, and cast a look on
+Cibber, as much as to say, "If you were not seventy-three!"
+
+His ejaculation was something so different from any tone any other person
+there present could have uttered that the actress's eye dwelt on him for
+a single moment, and in that moment he felt himself looked through and
+through.
+
+"I sold the young fops a bargain, you mean," was her calm reply; "and now
+I am come down to the old ones. A truce, Mr. Cibber, what do you
+understand by an actor? Tell me; for I am foolish enough to respect your
+opinion on these matters!"
+
+"An actor, young lady," said he, gravely, "is an artist who has gone deep
+enough in his art to make dunces, critics and greenhorns take it for
+nature; moreover, he really personates; which your mere _man of the
+stage_ never does. He has learned the true art of self-multiplication. He
+drops Betterton, Booth, Wilkes, or, ahem--"
+
+"Cibber," inserted Sir Charles Pomander. Cibber bowed.
+
+"In his dressing-room, and comes out young or old, a fop, a valet, a
+lover, or a hero, with voice, mien, and every gesture to match. A grain
+less than this may be good speaking, fine preaching, deep grunting, high
+ranting, eloquent reciting; but I'll be hanged if it is acting!"
+
+"Then Colley Cibber never acted," whispered Quin to Mrs. Clive.
+
+"Then Margaret Woffington is an actress," said M. W.; "the fine ladies
+take my Lady Betty for their sister. In Mrs. Day, I pass for a woman of
+seventy; and in Sir Harry Wildair I have been taken for a man. I would
+have told you that before, but I didn't know it was to my credit," said
+she, slyly, "till Mr. Cibber laid down the law."
+
+"Proof!" said Cibber.
+
+"A warm letter from one lady, diamond buckles from another, and an offer
+of her hand and fortune from a third; _rien que cela."_
+
+Mr. Cibber conveyed behind her back a look of absolute incredulity; she
+divined it.
+
+"I will not show you the letters," continued she, "because Sir Harry,
+though a rake, was a gentleman; but here are the buckles;" and she fished
+them out of her pocket, capacious of such things. The buckles were
+gravely inspected, they made more than one eye water, they were
+undeniable.
+
+"Well, let us see what we can do for her," said the Laureate. He tapped
+his box and without a moment's hesitation produced the most execrable
+distich in the language:
+
+"Now who is like Peggy, with talent at will, A maid loved her Harry, _for
+want of a Bill?
+
+"Well, child," continued he, after the applause which follows extemporary
+verses had subsided, "take _me_ in. Play something to make me lose sight
+of saucy Peg Woffington, and I'll give the world five acts more before
+the curtain falls on Colley Cibber."
+
+"If you could be deceived," put in Mr. Vane, somewhat timidly; "I think
+there is no disguise through which grace and beauty such as Mrs.
+Woffington's would not shine, to my eyes."
+
+"That is to praise my person at the expense of my wit, sir, is it not?"
+was her reply.
+
+This was the first word she had ever addressed to him. The tones appeared
+so sweet to him that he could not find anything to reply for listening to
+them; and Cibber resumed:
+
+"Meantime, I will show you a real actress; she is coming here to-night to
+meet me. Did ever you children hear of Ann Bracegirdle?"
+
+"Bracegirdle!" said Mrs. Clive; "why, she has been dead this thirty
+years; at least I thought so."
+
+"Dead to the stage. There is more heat in her ashes than in your fire,
+Kate Clive! Ah! here comes her messenger," continued he, as an ancient
+man appeared with a letter in his hand. This letter Mrs. Woffington
+snatched and read, and at the same instant in bounced the call-boy.
+"Epilogue called," said this urchin, in the tone of command which these
+small fry of Parnassus adopt; and, obedient to his high behest, Mrs.
+Woffington moved to the door, with the Bracegirdle missive in her hand,
+but not before she had delivered its general contents: "The great actress
+will be here in a few minutes," said she, and she glided swiftly out of
+the room.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+PEOPLE whose mind or manners possess any feature, and are not as devoid
+of all eccentricity as half pounds of butter bought of metropolitan
+grocers, are recommended not to leave a roomful of their acquaintances
+until the last but one. Yes, they should always be penultimate. Perhaps
+Mrs. Woffington knew this; but epilogues are stubborn things, and
+call-boys undeniable.
+
+"Did you ever hear a woman whistle before?"
+
+"Never; but I saw one sit astride on an ass in Germany!"
+
+"The saddle was not on her husband, I hope, madam?"
+
+"No, sir; the husband walked by his kinsfolk's side, and made the best of
+a bad bargain, as Peggy's husband will have to."
+
+"Wait till some one ventures on the gay Lotharia--_illi aes triplex;_
+that means he must have triple brass, Kitty."
+
+"I deny that, sir; since his wife will always have enough for both."
+
+"I have not observed the lady's brass," said Vane, trembling with
+passion; "but I observed her talent, and I noticed that whoever attacks
+her to her face comes badly off."
+
+"Well said, sir," answered Quin; "and I wish Kitty here would tell us why
+she hates Mrs. Woffington, the best-natured woman in the theater?"
+
+"I don't hate her, I don't trouble my head about her."
+
+"Yes, you hate her; for you never miss a cut at her!"
+
+"Do you hate a haunch of venison, Quin?" said the lady.
+
+"No, you little unnatural monster," replied Quin.
+
+"For all that, you never miss a cut at one, so hold your tongue!"
+
+"Le beau raisonnement!" said Mr. Cibber. "James Quin, don't interfere
+with nature's laws; let our ladies hate one another, it eases their
+minds; try to make them Christians, and you will not convert their
+tempers, but spoil your own. Peggy there hates George Anne Bellamy,
+because she has gaudy silk dresses from Paris, by paying for them, as
+_she_ could, if not too stingy. Kitty here hates Peggy because Rich has
+breeched her, whereas Kitty, who now sets up for a prude, wanted to put
+delicacy off and small-clothes on in Peg's stead, that is where the Kate
+and Peg shoe pinches, near the femoral artery, James.
+
+"Shrimps have the souls of shrimps," resumed this _censor castigatorque
+minorum._ "Listen to me, and learn that really great actors are great in
+soul, and do not blubber like a great school-girl because Anne Bellamy
+has two yellow silk dresses from Paris, as I saw Woffington blubber in
+this room, and would not be comforted; nor fume like Kitty Clive, because
+Woffington has a pair of breeches and a little boy's rapier to go a
+playing at acting with. When I was young, two giantesses fought for
+empire upon this very stage, where now dwarfs crack and bounce like
+parched peas. They played Roxana and Statira in the 'Rival Queens.' Rival
+queens of art themselves, they put out all their strength. In the middle
+of the last act the town gave judgment in favor of Statira. What did
+Roxana? Did she spill grease on Statira's robe, as Peg Woffington would?
+or stab her, as I believe Kitty here capable of doing? No! Statira was
+never so tenderly killed as that night; she owned this to me. Roxana bade
+the theater farewell that night, and wrote to Statira thus: I give you
+word for word: 'Madam, the best judge we have has decided in your favor.
+I shall never play second on a stage where I have been first so long, but
+I shall often be a spectator, and methinks none will appreciate your
+talent more than I, who have felt its weight. My wardrobe, one of the
+best in Europe, is of no use to me; if you will honor me by selecting a
+few of my dresses, you will gratify me, and I shall fancy I see myself
+upon the stage to greater advantage than before.'"
+
+"And what did Statira answer, sir?" said Mr. Vane, eagerly.
+
+"She answered thus: 'Madam, the town has often been wrong, and may have
+been so last night, in supposing that I vied successfully with your
+merit; but this much is certain--and here, madam, I am the best
+judge--that off the stage you have just conquered me. I shall wear with
+pride any dress you have honored, and shall feel inspired to great
+exertions by your presence among our spectators, unless, indeed, the
+sense of your magnanimity and the recollection of your talent should damp
+me by the dread of losing any portion of your good opinion.'"
+
+"What a couple of stiff old things," said Mrs. Clive.
+
+"Nay, madam, say not so," cried Vane, warmly; "surely, this was the lofty
+courtesy of two great minds not to be overbalanced by strife, defeat, or
+victory."
+
+"What were their names, sir?"
+
+"Statira was the great Mrs. Oldfield. Roxana you will see here to-night."
+
+This caused a sensation.
+
+Colley's reminiscences were interrupted by loud applause from the
+theater; the present seldom gives the past a long hearing.
+
+The old war-horse cocked his ears.
+
+"It is Woffington speaking the epilogue," said Quin.
+
+"Oh, she has got the length of their foot, somehow," said a small
+actress.
+
+"And the breadth of their hands, too," said Pomander, waking from a nap.
+
+"It is the depth of their hearts she has sounded," said Vane.
+
+In those days, if a metaphor started up, the poor thing was coursed up
+hill and down dale, and torn limb from jacket; even in Parliament, a
+trope was sometimes hunted from one session into another.
+
+"You were asking me about Mrs. Oldfield, sir," resumed Cibber, rather
+peevishly. "I will own to you, I lack words to convey a just idea of her
+double and complete supremacy. But the comedians of this day are
+weak-strained _farceurs_ compared with her, and her tragic tone was
+thunder set to music.
+
+"I saw a brigadier-general cry like a child at her Indiana; I have seen
+her crying with pain herself at the wing (for she was always a great
+sufferer), I have seen her then spring upon the stage as Lady Townley,
+and in a moment sorrow brightened into joy: the air seemed to fill with
+singing-birds, that chirped the pleasures of fashion, love and youth in
+notes sparkling like diamonds and stars and prisms. She was above
+criticism, out of its scope, as is the blue sky; men went not to judge
+her, they drank her, and gazed at her, and were warmed at her, and
+refreshed by her. The fops were awed into silence, and with their humbler
+betters thanked Heaven for her, if they thanked it for anything.
+
+"In all the crowded theater, care and pain and poverty were banished from
+the memory, while Oldfield's face spoke, and her tongue flashed melodies;
+the lawyer forgot his quillets; the polemic, the mote in his brother's
+eye; the old maid, her grudge against the two sexes; the old man, his
+gray hairs and his lost hours. And can it be, that all this which should
+have been immortal, is quite -- quite lost, is as though it had never
+been?" he sighed. "Can it be that its fame is now sustained by me; who
+twang with my poor lute, cracked and old, these feeble praises of a
+broken lyre:
+
+'Whose wires were golden and its heavenly air More tunable than lark to
+shepherd's ear, When wheat is green, when hawthorn buds appear'?"
+
+He paused, and his eye looked back over many years. Then, with a very
+different tone, he added:
+
+"And that Jack Falstaff there must have seen her, now I think on't."
+
+"Only once, sir," said Quin, "and I was but ten years old."
+
+"He saw her once, and he was ten years old; yet he calls Woffington a
+great comedian, and my son The's wife, with her hatchet face, the
+greatest tragedian he ever saw! Jemmy, what an ass you must be!"
+
+"Mrs. Cibber always makes me cry, and t'other always makes me laugh,"
+said Quin, stoutly, "that's why."
+
+_Ce beau raisonnement_ met no answer, but a look of sovereign contempt.
+
+A very trifling incident saved the ladies of the British stage from
+further criticism. There were two candles in this room, one on each side;
+the call-boy had entered, and, poking about for something, knocked down
+and broke one of these.
+
+"Awkward imp!" cried a velvet page.
+
+"I'll go _to the Treasury_ for another, ma'am," said the boy pertly, and
+vanished with the fractured wax.
+
+I take advantage of the interruption to open Mr. Vane's mind to the
+reader. First he had been astonished at the freedom of sarcasm these
+people indulged in without quarreling; next at the non-respect of sex.
+
+"So sex is not recognized in this community," thought he. Then the
+glibness and merit of some of their answers surprised and amused him. He,
+like me, had seldom met an imaginative repartee, except in a play or a
+book. "Society's" repartees were then, as they are now, the good old tree
+in various dresses and veils: _Tu quoque, tu mentiris, vos damnemini;_
+but he was sick and dispirited on the whole; such very bright illusions
+had been dimmed in these few minutes.
+
+She was brilliant; but her manners, if not masculine, were very daring;
+and yet when she spoke to him, a stranger, how sweet and gentle her voice
+was! Then it was clear nothing but his ignorance could have placed her at
+the summit of her art.
+
+Still he clung to his enthusiasm for her. He drew Pomander aside. "What a
+simplicity there is in Mrs. Woffington!" said he; "the rest, male and
+female, are all so affected; she is so fresh and natural. They are all
+hot-house plants; she is a cowslip with the May dew on it."
+
+"What you take for simplicity is her refined art," replied Sir Charles.
+
+"No!" said Vane, "I never saw a more innocent creature!"
+
+Pomander laughed in his face; this laugh disconcerted him more than
+words; he spoke no more--he sat pensive. He was sorry he had come to this
+place, where everybody knew his goddess; yet nobody admired, nobody
+loved, and, alas! nobody respected her.
+
+He was roused from his reverie by a noise; the noise was caused by Cibber
+falling on Garrick, whom Pomander had maliciously quoted against all the
+tragedians of Colley Cibber's day.
+
+"I tell you," cried the veteran, "that this Garrick has banished dignity
+from the stage and given us in exchange what you and he take for fire;
+but it is smoke and vapor. His manner is little, like his person, it is
+all fuss and bustle. This is his idea of a tragic scene: A little fellow
+comes bustling in, goes bustling about, and runs bustling out." Here Mr.
+Cibber left the room, to give greater effect to his description, but
+presently returned in a mighty pother, saying: "'Give me another horse!'
+Well, where's the horse? don't you see I'm waiting for him? 'Bind up my
+wounds!' Look sharp now with these wounds. 'Have mercy, Heaven!' but be
+quick about it, for the pit can't wait for Heaven. Bustle! bustle!
+bustle!"
+
+The old dog was so irresistibly funny that the whole company were obliged
+to laugh; but in the midst of their merriment Mrs. Woffington's voice was
+heard at the door.
+
+"This way, madam."
+
+A clear and somewhat shrill voice replied: "I know the way better than
+you, child;" and a stately old lady appeared on the threshold.
+
+"Bracegirdle," said Mr. Cibber.
+
+It may well be supposed that every eye was turned on this newcomer--that
+Roxana for whom Mr. Cibber's story had prepared a peculiar interest. She
+was dressed in a rich green velvet gown with gold fringe. Cibber
+remembered it; she had played the "Eastern Queen" in it. Heaven forgive
+all concerned! It was fearfully pinched in at the waist and ribs, so as
+to give the idea of wood inside, not woman.
+
+Her hair and eyebrows were iron-gray, and she had lost a front tooth, or
+she would still have been eminently handsome. She was tall and straight
+as a dart, and her noble port betrayed none of the weakness of age, only
+it was to be seen that her hands were a little weak, and the gold-headed
+crutch struck the ground rather sharply, as if it did a little
+limbs'-duty.
+
+Such was the lady who marched into the middle of the room, with a "How
+do, Colley?" and, looking over the company's heads as if she did not see
+them, regarded the four walls with some interest. Like a cat, she seemed
+to think more of places than of folk. The page obsequiously offered her a
+chair.
+
+"Not so clean as it used to be," said Mrs. Bracegirdle.
+
+Unfortunately, in making this remark, the old lady graciously patted the
+page's head for offering her the chair; and this action gave, with some
+of the ill-constituted minds that are ever on the titter, a ridiculous
+direction to a remark intended, I believe, for the paint and wanscots,
+etc.
+
+"Nothing is as it used to be," remarked Mr. Cibber.
+
+"All the better for everything," said Mrs. Clive.
+
+"We were laughing at this mighty little David, first actor of this mighty
+little age."
+
+Now if Mr. Cibber thought to find in the newcomer an ally of the past in
+its indiscriminate attack upon the present, he was much mistaken; for the
+old actress made onslaught on this nonsense at once.
+
+"Ay, ay," said she, "and not the first time by many hundreds. 'Tis a
+disease you have. Cure yourself, Colley. Davy Garrick pleases the public;
+and in trifles like acting, that take nobody to heaven, to please all the
+world, is to be great. Some pretend to higher aims, but none have 'em.
+You may hide this from young fools, mayhap, but not from an old 'oman
+like me. He! he! he! No, no, no--not from an old 'oman like me."
+
+She then turned round in her chair, and with that sudden, unaccountable
+snappishness of tone to which the brisk old are subject, she snarled:
+"Gie me a pinch of snuff, some of ye, do!"
+
+Tobacco dust was instantly at her disposal. She took it with the points
+of her fingers delicately, and divested the crime of half its uncleanness
+and vulgarity-- more an angel couldn't.
+
+"Monstrous sensible woman, though!" whispered Quin to Clive.
+
+"Hey, sir! what do you say, sir? for I'm a little deaf." (Not very to
+praise, it seems.)
+
+"That your judgment, madam, is equal to the reputation of your talent."
+
+The words were hardly spoken before the old lady rose upright as a tower.
+She then made an oblique preliminary sweep, and came down with such a
+courtesy as the young had never seen.
+
+James Quin, not to disgrace his generation, attempted a corresponding
+bow, for which his figure and apoplectic tendency rendered him unfit; and
+while he was transacting it, the graceful Cibber stepped gravely up, and
+looked down and up the process with his glass, like a naturalist
+inspecting some strange capriccio of an orang-outang. The gymnastics of
+courtesy ended without back-falls--Cibber lowered his tone.
+
+"You are right, Bracy. It is nonsense denying the young fellow's talent;
+but his Othello, now, Bracy! be just--his Othello!"
+
+"Oh, dear! oh, dear!" cried she; "I thought it was Desdemona's little
+black boy come in without the tea-kettle."
+
+Quin laughed uproariously.
+
+"It made me laugh a deal more than Mr. Quin's Falstaff. Oh, dear! oh,
+dear!"
+
+"Falstaff, indeed! Snuff!" In the tone of a trumpet.
+
+Quin secretly revoked his good opinion of this woman's sense.
+
+"Madam," said the page, timidly, "if you would but favor us with a
+specimen of the old style
+
+"Well, child, why not? Only what makes you mumble like that? but they all
+do it now, I see. Bless my soul! our words used to come out like
+brandy-cherries; but now a sentence is like raspberry-jam, on the stage
+and off."
+
+Cibber chuckled.
+
+"And why don't you men carry yourself like Cibber here?"
+
+"Don't press that question," said Colley dryly."
+
+"A monstrous poor actor, though," said the merciless old woman, in a mock
+aside to the others; "only twenty shillings a week for half his life;"
+and her shoulders went up to her ears--then she fell into a half reverie.
+"Yes, we were distinct," said she; "but I must own, children, we were
+slow. Once, in the midst of a beautiful tirade, my lover went to sleep,
+and fell against me. A mighty pretty epigram, twenty lines, was writ on't
+by one of my gallants. Have ye as many of them as we used?"
+
+"In that respect," said the page, "we are not behind our
+great-grandmothers."
+
+"I call that pert," said Mrs. Bracegirdle, with the air of one drawing
+scientific distinctions. "Now, is that a boy or a lady that spoke to me
+last?"
+
+"By its dress, I should say a boy," said Cibber, with his glass; "by its
+assurance, a lady!"
+
+"There's one clever woman among ye; Peg something, plays Lothario, Lady
+Betty Modish, and what not?"
+
+"What! admire Woffington?" screamed Mrs. Clive; "why, she is the greatest
+gabbler on the stage."
+
+"I don't care," was the reply, "there's nature about the jade. Don't
+contradict me," added she, with sudden fury; "a parcel of children."
+
+"No, madam," said Clive humbly. "Mr. Cibber, will you try and prevail on
+Mrs. Bracegirdle to favor us with a recitation?"
+
+Cibber handed his cane with pomp to a small actor. Bracegirdle did the
+same; and, striking the attitudes that had passed for heroic in their
+day, they declaimed out of the "Rival Queens" two or three tirades, which
+I graciously spare the reader of this tale. Their elocution was neat and
+silvery; but not one bit like the way people speak in streets, palaces,
+fields, roads and rooms. They had not made the grand discovery, which Mr.
+A. Wigan on the stage, and every man of sense off it, has made in our day
+and nation; namely, that the stage is a representation, not of stage, but
+of life; and that an actor ought to speak and act in imitation of human
+beings, not of speaking machines that have run and creaked in a stage
+groove, with their eyes shut upon the world at large, upon nature, upon
+truth, upon man, upon woman and upon child.
+
+"This is slow," cried Cibber; "let us show these young people how ladies
+and gentlemen moved fifty years ago, _dansons."_
+
+A fiddler was caught, a beautiful slow minuet played, and a bit of
+"solemn dancing" done. Certainly it was not gay, but it must be owned it
+was beautiful; it was the dance of kings, the poetry of the courtly
+saloon.
+
+The retired actress, however, had frisker notions left in her. "This is
+slow," cried she, and bade the fiddler play, "The wind that shakes the
+barley," an ancient jig tune; this she danced to in a style that utterly
+astounded the spectators.
+
+She showed them what fun was; her feet and her stick were all echoes to
+the mad strain; out went her heel behind, and, returning, drove her four
+yards forward. She made unaccountable slants, and cut them all over in
+turn if they did not jump for it. Roars of inextinguishable laughter
+arose, it would have made an oyster merry. Suddenly she stopped, and put
+her hands to her sides, and soon after she gave a vehement cry of pain.
+
+The laughter ceased.
+
+She gave another cry of such agony that they were all round her in a
+moment.
+
+"Oh, help me, ladies," screamed the poor woman, in tones as feminine as
+they were heart-rending and piteous. "Oh, my back! my loins! I suffer,
+gentlemen," said the poor thing, faintly.
+
+What was to be done? Mr. Vane offered his penknife to cut her laces.
+
+"You shall cut my head off sooner," cried she, with sudden energy. "Don't
+pity me," said she, sadly, "I don't deserve it;" then, lifting her eyes,
+she exclaimed, with a sad air of self-reproach: "O vanity! do you never
+leave a woman?"
+
+"Nay, madam!" whimpered the page, who was a good-hearted girl; "'twas
+your great complaisance for us, not vanity. Oh! oh! oh!" and she began to
+blubber, to make matters better.
+
+"No, my children," said the old lady, "'twas vanity. I wanted to show you
+what an old 'oman could do; and I have humiliated myself, trying to
+outshine younger folk. I am justly humiliated, as you see;" and she began
+to cry a little.
+
+"This is very painful," said Cibber.
+
+Mrs. Bracegirdle now raised her eyes (they had set her in a chair), and
+looking sweetly, tenderly and earnestly on her old companion, she said to
+him, slowly, gently, but impressively "Colley, at threescore years and
+ten this was ill done of us! You and I are here now--for what? to cheer
+the young up the hill we mounted years ago. And, old friend, if we
+detract from them we discourage them. A great sin in the old!"
+
+"Every dog his day."
+
+"We have had ours." Here she smiled, then, laying her hand tenderly in
+the old man's, she added, with calm solemnity: "And now we must go
+quietly toward our rest, and strut and fret no more the few last minutes
+of life's fleeting hour."
+
+How tame my cacotype of these words compared with what they were. I am
+ashamed of them and myself, and the human craft of writing, which, though
+commoner far, is so miserably behind the godlike art of speech: _"Si
+ipsam audivisses!"_
+
+These ink scratches, which, in the imperfection of language, we have
+called words, till the unthinking actually dream they are words, but
+which are the shadows of the corpses of words; these word-shadows then
+were living powers on her lips, and subdued, as eloquence always does,
+every heart within reach of the imperial tongue.
+
+The young loved her, and the old man, softened and vanquished, and
+mindful of his failing life, was silent, and pressed his handkerchief to
+his eyes a moment; then he said:
+
+"No, Bracy, no. Be composed, I pray you. She is right. Young people,
+forgive me that I love the dead too well, and the days when I was what
+you are now. Drat the woman," continued he, half ashamed of his emotion;
+"she makes us laugh, and makes us cry, just as she used."
+
+"What does he say, young woman?" said the old lady, dryly, to Mrs. Clive.
+
+"He says you make us laugh, and make us cry, madam; and so you do me, I'm
+sure."
+
+"And that's Peg Woffington's notion of an actress! Better it, Cibber and
+Bracegirdle, if you can," said the other, rising up like lightning.
+
+She then threw Colley Cibber a note, and walked coolly and rapidly out of
+the room, without looking once behind her.
+
+The rest stood transfixed, looking at one another, and at the empty
+chair. Then Cibber opened and read the note aloud. It was from Mrs.
+Bracegirdle: "Playing at tric-trac; so can't play the fool in your
+green-room to-night. B."
+
+On this, a musical ringing laugh was heard from outside the door, where
+the pseudo Bracegirdle was washing the gray from her hair, and the
+wrinkles from her face--ah! I wish I could do it as easily!-- and the
+little bit of sticking-plaster from her front tooth.
+
+"Why, it is the Irish jade!" roared Cibber.
+
+"Divil a less!" rang back a rich brogue; "and it's not the furst time we
+put the comether upon ye, England, my jewal!"
+
+One more mutual glance, and then the mortal cleverness of all this began
+to dawn on their minds; and they broke forth into clapping of hands, and
+gave this accomplished _mime_ three rounds of applause; Mr. Vane and Sir
+Charles Pomander leading with, "Bravo, Woffington!"
+
+Its effect on Mr. Vane may be imagined. Who but she could have done this?
+This was as if a painter should so paint a man as to deceive his species.
+This was acting, but not like the acting of the stage. He was in
+transports, and self-satisfaction at his own judgment mingled pleasantly
+with his admiration.
+
+In this cheerful exhibition, one joined not--Mr. Cibber. His theories had
+received a shock (and we all love our theories). He himself had received
+a rap--and we don't hate ourselves.
+
+Great is the syllogism! But there is a class of arguments less
+vulnerable.
+
+If A says to B, "You can't hit me, as I prove by this syllogism" (here
+followeth the syllogism), "and B, _pour toute reponse,_ knocks A down
+such a whack that he rebounds into a sitting posture; and to him the man,
+the tree, the lamp-post and the fire-escape become not clearly
+distinguishable; this barbarous logic prevails against the logic in
+Barbara, and the syllogism is in the predicament of Humpty Dumpty. In
+this predicament was the Poet Laureate. "The miscreant Proteus (could
+not) escape these chains!" So the miscreant Proteus--no bad name for an
+old actor--took his little cocked hat and marched, a smaller, if not a
+wiser man. Some disjointed words fell from him: "Mimicry is not acting,"
+etc.; and with one bitter, mowing glance at the applauders, _circumferens
+acriter oculos,_ he vanished in the largest pinch of snuff on record. The
+rest dispersed more slowly.
+
+Mr. Vane waited eagerly, and watched the door for Mrs. Woffington; but
+she did not come. He then made acquaintance with good-natured Mr. Quin,
+who took him upon the stage and showed him by what vulgar appliances that
+majestic rise of the curtain he so admired was effected. Returning to the
+green-room for his friend, he found him in animated conversation with
+Mrs. Woffington. This made Vane uneasy.
+
+Sir Charles, up to the present moment of the evening, had been unwontedly
+silent, and now he was talking nineteen to the dozen, and Mrs. Woffington
+was listening with an appearance of interest that sent a pang to poor
+Vane's heart; he begged Mr. Quin to introduce him.
+
+Mr. Quin introduced him.
+
+The lady received his advances with polite composure. Mr. Vane stammered
+his admiration of her Bracegirdle; but all he could find words to say was
+mere general praise, and somewhat coldly received. Sir Charles, on the
+contrary, spoke more like a critic. "Had you given us the stage cackle,
+or any of those traditionary symptoms of old age, we should have
+instantly detected you," said he; "but this was art copying nature, and
+it may be years before such a triumph of illusion is again effected under
+so many adverse circumstances."
+
+"You are very good, Sir Charles," was the reply. "You flatter me. It was
+one of those things which look greater than they are. Nobody here knew
+Bracegirdle but Mr. Cibber; Mr. Cibber cannot see well without his
+glasses, and I got rid of one of the candles; I sent one of the imps of
+the theater to knock it down. I know Mrs. Bracegirdle by heart. I drink
+tea with her every Sunday. I had her dress on, and I gave the old boy her
+words and her way of thinking; it was mere mimicry; it was nothing
+compared with what I once did; but, a-hem!"
+
+"Pray tell us!"
+
+"I am afraid I shall shock your friend. I see he is not a wicked man like
+you, and perhaps does not know what good-for-nothing creatures actresses
+are."
+
+"He is not so ignorant as he looks," replied Sir Charles.
+
+"That is not quite the answer I expected, Sir Charles," replied this
+lively lady; "but it serves me right for fishing on dry land. Well, then,
+you must know a young gentleman courted me. I forget whether I liked him
+or not; but you will fancy I hated him, for I promised to marry him. You
+must understand, gentlemen, that I was sent into the world, not to act,
+which I abominate, but to chronicle small beer and teach an army of
+little brats their letters; so this word 'wife,' and that word
+'chimney-corner,' took possession of my mind, and a vision of darning
+stockings for a large party, all my own, filled my heart, and really I
+felt quite grateful to the little brute that was to give me all this, and
+he would have had such a wife as men never do have, still less deserve.
+But one fine day that the theater left me time to examine his manner
+toward me, I instantly discovered he was deceiving me. So I had him
+watched, and the little brute was going to marry another woman, and break
+it to me by degrees afterward, etc. You know, Sir Charles? Ah! I see you
+do.
+
+"I found her out; got an introduction to her father; went down to his
+house three days before the marriage, with a little coalblack mustache,
+regimentals, and what not; made up, in short, with the art of my sex,
+gentlemen--and the impudence of yours.
+
+"The first day I flirted and danced with the bride. The second I made
+love to her, and at night I let her know that her intended was a villain.
+I showed her letters of his; protestations, oaths of eternal fidelity to
+one Peg Woffington, 'who will die,' drawled I,' if he betrays her.'
+
+"And here, gentlemen, mark the justice of Heaven. I received a backhanded
+slap: 'Peg Woffington! an actress! Oh, the villain!' cried she; 'let him
+marry the little vagabond. How dare he insult me with his hand that had
+been offered in such a quarter?'
+
+"So, in a fit of virtuous indignation, the little hypocrite dismissed the
+little brute; in other words, she had fallen in love with me.
+
+"I have not had many happy hours, but I remember it was delicious to look
+out of my window, and at the same moment smell the honeysuckles and see
+my _perfide_ dismissed under a heap of scorn and a pile of luggage he had
+brought down for his wedding tour.
+
+"I scampered up to London, laughing all the way; and when I got home, if
+I remember right, I cried for two hours. How do you account for that?"
+
+"I hope, madam," said Vane, gravely, "it was remorse for having trifled
+with that poor young lady's heart; she had never injured you."
+
+"But, sir, the husband I robbed her of was a brute and a villain in his
+little way, and wicked and good-for-nothing, etc. He would have deceived
+that poor little hypocrite, as he had this one," pointing to herself.
+
+"That is not what I mean; you inspired her with an attachment, never to
+be forgotten. Poor lady, how many sleepless nights has she passed since
+then, how many times has she strained her eyes to see her angel lover
+returning to her! She will not forget in two years the love it cost you
+but two days to inspire. The powerful should be merciful. Ah! I fear you
+have no heart."
+
+These words had no sooner burst from Mr. Vane, than he was conscious of
+the strange liberty he had taken, and, indeed, the bad taste he had been
+guilty of; and this feeling was not lessened when he saw Mrs. Woffington
+color up to the temples. Her eyes, too, glittered like basilisks; but she
+said nothing, which was remarkable in her, whose tongue was the sword of
+a _maitre d'armes._
+
+Sir Charles eyed his friend in a sly, satirical manner; he then said,
+laughingly: "In two months _she married a third!_ don't waste your
+sympathy," and turned the talk into another channel; and soon after, Mrs.
+Woffington's maid appearing at the door, she courtesied to both gentlemen
+and left the theater. Sir Charles Pomander accompanied Mr. Vane a little
+way.
+
+"What becomes of her innocence?" was his first word.
+
+"One loses sight of it in her immense talent," said the lover.
+
+"She certainly is clever in all that bears upon her business," was the
+reply; "but I noticed you were a little shocked with her indelicacy in
+telling us that story, and still more in having it to tell."
+
+"Indelicacy? No!" said Vane; "the little brute deserved it. Good Heavens!
+to think that 'a little brute' might have married that angel, and
+actually broke faith to lose her; it is incredible, the crime is diluted
+by the absurdity."
+
+"Have you heard him tell the story? No? Then take my word for it, you
+have not heard the facts of the case."
+
+"Ah! you are prejudiced against her?"
+
+"On the contrary, I like her. But I know that with all women the present
+lover is an angel and the past a demon, and so on in turn. And I know
+that if Satan were to enter the women of the stage, with the wild idea of
+impairing their veracity, he would come out of their minds a greater liar
+than he went in, and the innocent darlings would never know their
+spiritual father had been at them."
+
+Doubtful whether this sentiment and period could be improved, Sir Charles
+parted with his friend, leaving his sting in him like a friend; the
+other's reflections as he sauntered home were not strictly those of a
+wise, well-balanced mind; they ran in this style:
+
+"When she said, 'Is not that to praise my person at the expense of my
+wit?' I ought to have said, 'Nay, madam; could your wit disguise your
+person, it would betray itself, so you would still shine confessed;' and
+instead of that I said nothing!"
+
+He then ran over in his mind all the opportunities he had had for putting
+in something smart, and bitterly regretted those lost opportunities; and
+made the smart things, and beat the air with them. Then his cheeks
+tingled when he remembered that he had almost scolded her; and he
+concocted a very different speech, and straightway repeated it in
+imagination.
+
+This is lovers' pastime; I own it funny; but it is open to one objection,
+this single practice of sitting upon eggs no longer chickenable, carried
+to a habit, is capable of turning a solid intellect into a liquid one,
+and ruining a mind's career.
+
+We leave Mr. Vane, therefore, with a hope that he will not do it every
+night; and we follow his friend to the close of our chapter.
+
+Hey for a definition!
+
+What is diplomacy? Is it folly in a coat that looks like sagacity? Had
+Sir Charles Pomander, instead of watching Mr. Vane and Mrs. Woffington,
+asked the former whether he admired the latter, and whether the latter
+responded, straightforward Vane would have told him the whole truth in a
+minute. Diplomacy therefore was, as it often is, a waste of time.
+
+But diplomacy did more in this case, it _sapienter descendebat in
+fossam;_ it fell on its nose with gymnastic dexterity, as it generally
+does, upon my word.
+
+To watch Mrs. Woffington's face _vis-a-vis_ Mr. Vane, Pomander introduced
+Vane to the green-room of the Theater Royal, Covent Garden. By this
+Pomander learned nothing, because Mrs. Woffington had, with a wonderful
+appearance of openness, the closest face in Europe when she chose.
+
+On the other hand, by introducing this country gentleman to this
+green-room, he gave a mighty impulse and opportunity to Vane's love; an
+opportunity which he forgot the timid, inexperienced Damon might
+otherwise never have found.
+
+Here diplomacy was not policy, for, as my sagacious reader has perhaps
+divined, Sir Charles Pomander _was after her himself._
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+YES, Sir Charles was _after_ Mrs. Woffington. I use that phrase because
+it is a fine generic one, suitable to different kinds of love-making.
+
+Mr. Vane's sentiments were an inexplicable compound; but respect,
+enthusiasm, and deep admiration were the uppermost.
+
+The good Sir Charles was no enigma. He had a vacancy in his
+establishment--a very high situation, too, for those who like that sort
+of thing--the head of his table, his left hand when he drove in the Park,
+etc. To this he proposed to promote Mrs. Woffington. She was handsome and
+witty, and he liked her. But that was not what caused him to pursue her;
+slow, sagacious, inevitable as a beagle.
+
+She was celebrated, and would confer great _eclat_ on him. The scandal of
+possessing her was a burning temptation. Women admire celebrity in a man;
+but men adore it in a woman.
+
+"The world," says Philip, "is a famous man; What will not women love so
+taught?"
+
+I will try to answer this question.
+
+The women will more readily forgive disgusting physical deformity for
+Fame's sake than we. They would embrace with more rapture a famous
+orang-outang than we an illustrious chimpanzee; but when it comes to
+moral deformity the tables are turned.
+
+Had the queen pardoned Mr. Greenacre and Mrs. Manning, would the great
+rush have been on the hero, or the heroine? Why, on Mrs. Macbeth! To her
+would the blackguards have brought honorable proposals, and the gentry
+liberal ones.
+
+Greenacre would have found more female admirers than I ever shall; but
+the grand stream of sexual admiration would have set Mariaward. This fact
+is as dark as night; but it is as sure as the sun.
+
+The next day "the friends" (most laughable of human substantives!) met in
+the theater, and again visited the green-room; and this time Vane
+determined to do himself more justice. He was again disappointed; the
+actress's manner was ceremoniously polite. She was almost constantly on
+the stage, and in a hurry when off it; and, when there was a word to be
+got with her the ready, glib Sir Charles was sure to get it. Vane could
+not help thinking it hard that a man who professed no respect for her
+should thus keep the light from him; and he could hardly conceal his
+satisfaction when Pomander, at night, bade him farewell for a fortnight.
+Pressing business took Sir Charles into the country.
+
+The good Sir Charles, however, could not go without leaving his sting
+behind as a companion to his friend. He called on Mr. Vane and after a
+short preface, containing the words "our friendship," "old kindness," "my
+greater experience," he gravely warned him against Mrs. Woffington.
+
+"Not that I would say this if you could take her for what she is, and
+amuse yourself with her as she will with you, if she thinks it worth her
+while. But I see you have a heart, and she will make a football of it,
+and torment you beyond all you have ever conceived of human anguish."
+
+Mr. Vane colored high, and was about to interrupt the speaker; but he
+continued:
+
+"There, I am in a hurry. But ask Quin, or anybody who knows her history,
+you will find she has had scores of lovers, and no one remains her friend
+after they part."
+
+"Men are such villains!"
+
+"Very likely," was the reply; "but twenty men don't ill-use one good
+woman; those are not the proportions. Adieu!"
+
+This last hit frightened Mr. Vane, he began to look into himself; he
+could not but feel that he was a mere child in this woman's hands; and,
+more than that, his conscience told him that if his heart should be made
+a football of it would be only a just and probable punishment. For there
+were particular reasons why he, of all men, had no business to look twice
+at any woman whose name was Woffington.
+
+That night he avoided the green-room, though he could not forego the
+play; but the next night he determined to stay at home altogether.
+Accordingly, at five o'clock, the astounded box-keeper wore a visage of
+dismay--there was no shilling for him! and Mr. Vane's nightly shilling
+had assumed the sanctity of salary in his mind.
+
+Mr. Vane strolled disconsolate; he strolled by the Thames, he strolled up
+and down the Strand; and, finally, having often admired the wisdom of
+moths in their gradual approach to what is not good for them, he strolled
+into the green-room, Covent Garden, and sat down. When there he did not
+feel happy. Besides, she had always been cold to him, and had given no
+sign of desiring his acquaintance, still less of recognition.
+
+Mr. Vane had often seen a weathercock at work, and he had heard a woman
+compared to it; but he had never realized the simplicity, beauty and
+justice of the simile. He was therefore surprised, as well as thrilled,
+when Mrs. Woffington, so cool, ceremonious and distant hitherto, walked
+up to him in the green-room with a face quite wreathed in smiles, and,
+without preliminary, thanked him for all the beautiful flowers he had
+sent her.
+
+"What, Mrs. Woffington -- what, you recognize me?"
+
+"Of course, and have been foolish enough to feel quite supported by the
+thought I had at least one friend in the house. But," said she, looking
+down, "now you must not be angry; here are some stones that have fallen
+somehow among the flowers. I am going to give you them back, because I
+value flowers, so I cannot have them mixed with anything else; but don't
+ask me for a flower back," added she, seeing the color mount on his face,
+"for I would not give one of them to you, or anybody."
+
+Imagine the effect of this on a romantic disposition like Mr. Vane's.
+
+He told her how glad he was that she could distinguish his features amid
+the crowd of her admirers; he confessed he had been mortified when he
+found himself, as he thought, entirely a stranger to her.
+
+She interrupted him.
+
+"Do you know your friend Sir Charles Pomander? No! I am almost sure you
+do; well, he is a man I do not like. He is deceitful, besides he is a
+wicked man. There, to be plain with you, he was watching me all that
+night, the first time you came here, and, because I saw he was watching
+me I would not know who you were, nor anything about you."
+
+"But you looked as if you had never seen me before."
+
+"Of course I did, when I had made up my mind to," said the actress,
+naively.
+
+"Sir Charles has left London for a fortnight, so, if he is the only
+obstacle, I hope you will know me every night."
+
+"Why, you sent me no flowers yesterday or to-day."
+
+"But I will to-morrow."
+
+"Then I am sure I shall know your face again; good-by. Won't you see me
+in the last act, and tell me how ill I do it?"
+
+"Oh, yes!" and he hurried to his box, and so the actress secured one pair
+of hands for her last act.
+
+He returned to the green-room, but she did not revisit that verdant
+bower. The next night, after the usual compliments, she said to him,
+looking down with a sweet, engaging air:
+
+"I sent a messenger into the country to know about that lady."
+
+"What lady?" said Vane, scarcely believing his senses.
+
+"That you were so unkind to me about."
+
+"I, unkind to you? what a brute I must be!"
+
+"My meaning is, you justly rebuked me, only you should not tell an
+actress she has no heart--that is always understood. Well, Sir Charles
+Pomander said she married a third in two months!"
+
+"And did she?"
+
+"No, it was in six weeks; that man never tells the truth; and since then
+she has married a fourth."
+
+"I am glad of it!"
+
+"So am I, since you awakened my conscience."
+
+Delicious flattery! and of all flattery the sweetest, when a sweet
+creature does flattery, not merely utters it.
+
+After this, Vane made no more struggles; he surrendered himself to the
+charming seduction, and as his advances were respectful, but ardent and
+incessant, he found himself at the end of a fortnight Mrs. Woffington's
+professed lover.
+
+They wrote letters to each other every day. On Sunday they went to church
+together in the morning, and spent the afternoon in the suburbs wherever
+grass was and dust was not.
+
+In the next fortnight, poor Vane thought he had pretty well fathomed this
+extraordinary woman's character. Plumb the Atlantic with an eighty-fathom
+line, sir!
+
+"She is religious," said he, "she loves a church much better than a
+playhouse, and she never laughs nor goes to sleep in church as I do. And
+she is breaking me of swearing--by degrees. She says that no fashion can
+justify what is profane, and that it must be vulgar as well as wicked.
+And she is frankness and simplicity itself."
+
+Another thing that charmed him was her disinterestedness. She ordered him
+to buy her a present every day, but it was never to cost above a
+shilling. If an article could be found that cost exactly tenpence (a
+favorite sum of hers), she was particularly pleased, and these shilling
+presents were received with a flush of pleasure and brightening eyes. But
+when one day he appeared with a diamond necklace, it was taken very
+coldly, he was not even thanked for it, and he was made to feel, once for
+all, that the tenpenny ones were the best investments toward her favor.
+
+Then he found out that she was very prudent and rather stingy; of Spartan
+simplicity in her diet, and a scorner of dress off the stage. To redeem
+this she was charitable, and her charity and her economy sometimes had a
+sore fight, during which she was peevish, poor little soul.
+
+One day she made him a request.
+
+"I can't bear you should think me worse than I am, and I don't want you
+to think me better than I am."
+
+Vane trembled.
+
+"But don't speak to others about me; promise, and I will promise to tell
+you my whole story, whenever you are entitled to such a confidence.
+
+"When shall I be entitled to it?"
+
+"When I am sure you love me."
+
+"Do you doubt that now?"
+
+"Yes! I think you love me, but I am not sure.
+
+"Margaret, remember I have known you much longer than you have known me.
+
+"No!"
+
+"Yes! Two months before we ever spoke I lived upon your face and voice.
+
+"That is to say you looked from your box at me upon the stage, and did
+not I look from the stage at you?"
+
+"Never! you always looked at the pit, and my heart used to sink."
+
+"On the 17th of May you first came into that box. I noticed you a little,
+the next day I noticed you a little more; I saw you fancied you liked me,
+after a while I could not have played without you."
+
+Here was delicious flattery again, and poor Vane believed every word of
+it.
+
+As for her request and her promise, she showed her wisdom in both these.
+As Sir Charles observed, it is a wonderful point gained if you allow a
+woman to tell her story her own way.
+
+How the few facts that are allowed to remain get molded and twisted out
+of ugly forms into pretty shapes by those supple, dexterous fingers!
+
+This present story cannot give the life of Mrs. Woffington, but only one
+great passage therein, as do the epic and dramatic writers; but since
+there was often great point in any sentences spoken on important
+occasions by this lady, I will just quote her defense of herself. The
+reader may be sure she did not play her weakest card; let us give her the
+benefit.
+
+One day she and Kitty Clive were at it ding-dong; the green-room was full
+of actors, male and female, but there were no strangers, and the ladies
+were saying things which the men of this generation only think; at last
+Mrs. Woffington finding herself roughly, and, as she thought, unjustly
+handled, turned upon the assembly and said: "What man did ever I ruin in
+all my life? Speak who can!"
+
+And there was a dead silence.
+
+"What woman is there here at as much as three pounds per week even, that
+hasn't ruined two at the very least?"
+
+Report says there was a dead silence again, until Mrs. Clive perked up,
+and said she had only ruined one, and that was his own fault!
+
+Mrs. Woffington declined to attach weight to this example. "Kitty Clive
+is the hook without the bait," said she; and the laugh turned, as it
+always did, against Peggy's antagonist.
+
+Thus much was speedily shown to Mr. Vane, that, whatever were Mrs.
+Woffington's intentions toward him, interest had at present nothing to do
+with them; indeed it was made clear that even were she to surrender her
+liberty to him, it would only be as a princess, forging golden chains for
+herself with her own royal hand.
+
+Another fortnight passed to the mutual satisfaction of the lovers. To
+Vane it was a dream of rapture to be near this great creature, whom
+thousands admired at such a distance; to watch over her, to take her to
+the theater in a warm shawl, to stand at the wing and receive her as she
+came radiant from her dressing-room, to watch her from her rear as she
+stood like some power about to descend on the stage, to see her
+falcon-like stoop upon the said stage, and hear the burst of applause
+that followed, as the report does the flash; to compare this with the
+spiritless crawl with which common artists went on, tame from their first
+note to their last; to take her hand when she came off, feel how her
+nerves were strung like a greyhound's after a race, and her whole frame
+in a high even glow, with the great Pythoness excitement of art.
+
+And to have the same great creature leaning her head on his shoulder, and
+listening with a charming complacency, while he purred to her of love and
+calm delights, alternate with still greater triumphs; for he was to turn
+dramatic writer, for her sake, was to write plays, a woman the hero, and
+love was to inspire him, and passion supply the want of pencraft. (You
+make me laugh, Mr. Vane!)
+
+All this was heavenly.
+
+And then with all her dash, and fire, and bravado, she was a thorough
+woman.
+
+"Margaret!"
+
+"Ernest!"
+
+"I want to ask you a question. Did you really cry because that Miss
+Bellamy had dresses from Paris?"
+
+"It does not seem very likely."
+
+"No, but tell me; did you?"
+
+"Who said I did?"
+
+"Mr. Cibber."
+
+"Old fool!"
+
+"Yes, but did you?"
+
+"Did I what?"
+
+"Cry!"
+
+"Ernest, the minx's dresses were beautiful."
+
+"No doubt. But did you cry?"
+
+"And mine were dirty; I don't care about gilt rags, but dirty dresses,
+ugh!"
+
+"Tell me, then."
+
+"Tell you what?"
+
+"Did you cry or not?"
+
+"Ah! he wants to find out whether I am a fool, and despise me."
+
+"No, I think I should love you better. For hitherto I have seen no
+weakness in you, and it makes me uncomfortable."
+
+"Be comforted! Is it not a weakness to like you!"
+
+"You are free from that weakness, or you would gratify my curiosity."
+
+"Be pleased to state, in plain, intelligible English, what you require of
+me."
+
+"I want to know, in one word, did you cry or not?"
+
+"Promise to tease me no more then, and I'll tell you."
+
+"I promise."
+
+"You won't despise me?"
+
+"Despise you! of course not."
+
+"Well, then--I don't remember!"
+
+On another occasion they were seated in the dusk, by the side of the
+canal in the Park, when a little animal began to potter about on an
+adjacent bank.
+
+Mrs. Woffington contemplated it with curiosity and delight.
+
+"Oh, you pretty creature!" said she. "Now you are a rabbit; at least, I
+think so."
+
+"No," said Vane, innocently; "that is a rat."
+
+"Ah! ah! ah!" screamed Mrs. Woffington, and pinched his arm. This
+frightened the rat, who disappeared. She burst out laughing: "There's a
+fool! The thing did not frighten me, and the name did. Depend upon it,
+it's true what they say--that off the stage, I am the greatest fool there
+is. I'll never be so absurd again. Ah! ah! ah! here it is again" (scream
+and pinch, as before). "Do take me from this horrid place, where monsters
+come from the great deep."
+
+And she flounced away, looking daggers askant at the place the rat had
+vacated in equal terror.
+
+All this was silly, but it pleases us men, and contrast is so charming!
+This same fool was brimful of talent--and cunning, too, for that matter.
+
+She played late that night, and Mr. Vane saw the same creature, who dared
+not stay where she was liable to a distant rat, spring upon the stage as
+a gay rake, and flash out her rapier, and act valor's king to the life,
+and seem ready to eat up everybody, King Fear included; and then, after
+her brilliant sally upon the public, Sir Harry Wildair came and stood
+beside Mr. Vane. Her bright skin, contrasted with her powdered periwig,
+became dazzling. She used little rouge, but that little made her eyes two
+balls of black lightning. From her high instep to her polished forehead,
+all was symmetry. Her leg would have been a sculptor's glory; and the
+curve from her waist to her knee was Hogarth's line itself.
+
+She stood like Mercury new lighted on a heaven-kissing hill. She placed
+her foot upon the ground, as she might put a hand upon her lover's
+shoulder. We indent it with our eleven undisguised stone.
+
+Such was Sir Harry Wildair, who stood by Mr. Vane, glittering with
+diamond buckles, gorgeous with rich satin breeches, velvet coat, ruffles,
+_pictcae vestis et auri;_ and as she bent her long eye-fringes down on
+him (he was seated), all her fiery charms gradually softened and quivered
+down to womanhood.
+
+"The first time I was here," said Vane, "my admiration of you broke out
+to Mr. Cibber; and what do you think he said?"
+
+"That you praised me, for me to hear you. Did you?"
+
+"Acquit me of such meanness."
+
+"Forgive me. It is just what I should have done, had I been courting an
+actress."
+
+"I think you have not met many ingenuous spirits, dear friend."
+
+"Not one, my child."
+
+This was a phrase she often applied to him now.
+
+"The old fellow pretended to hear what I said, too; and I am sure you did
+not-- did you?"
+
+"Guess."
+
+"I guess not."
+
+"I am afraid I must plead guilty. An actress's ears are so quick to hear
+praise, to tell you the truth, I did catch a word or two, and, 'It told,
+sir--it told.'"
+
+"You alarm me! At this rate, I shall never know what you see, hear or
+think, by your face."
+
+"When you want to know anything, ask me, and I will tell you; but nobody
+else shall learn anything, nor even you, any other way."
+
+"Did you hear the feeble tribute of praise I was paying you, when you
+came in?" inquired Vane.
+
+"No. You did not say that my voice had the compass and variety of nature,
+and my movements were free and beautiful, while the others when in motion
+were stilts, and coffee-pots when in repose, did you?"
+
+"Something of the sort, I believe," cried Vane, laughing.
+
+"I melted from one fine statue into another, I restored the Antinous to
+his true sex.--Goose!--Painters might learn their art from me (in my
+dressing-room, no doubt), and orators revive at my lips the music of
+Athens, that quelled mad mobs and princes drunk with victory.--Silly
+fellow!--Praise was never so sweet to me," murmured she, inclining like a
+goddess of love toward him; and he fastened on two velvet lips, that did
+not shun the sweet attack, but gently parted with a heavenly sigh; while
+her heaving bosom and yielding frame and swimming eyes confessed her
+conqueror.
+
+That morning Mr. Vane had been dispirited, and apparently
+self-discontented; but at night he went home in a state of mental
+intoxication. His poetic enthusiasm, his love, his vanity, were all
+gratified at once. And all these, singly, have conquered Prudence and
+Virtue a million times.
+
+She had confessed to him that she was disposed to risk her happiness on
+him; she had begged him to submit to a short probation; and she had
+promised, if her confidence and esteem remained unimpaired at the close
+of that period--which was not to be an unhappy one--to take advantage of
+the summer holidays, and cross the water with him, and forget everything
+in the world with him, but love.
+
+How was it that the very next morning clouds chased one another across
+his face? Was it that men are happy but while the chase is doubtful? Was
+it the letter from Pomander announcing his return, and sneeringly
+inquiring whether he was still the dupe of Peg Woffington? or was it that
+same mysterious disquiet which attacked him periodically, and then gave
+way for a while to pleasure and her golden dreams?
+
+The next day was to be a day of delight. He was to entertain her at his
+own house; and, to do her honor, he had asked Mr. Cibber, Mr. Quin and
+other actors, critics, etc.
+
+Our friend, Sir Charles Pomander, had been guilty of two ingenuities:
+first, he had written three or four letters, full of respectful
+admiration, to Mrs. Woffington, of whom he spoke slightingly to Vane;
+second, he had made a disingenuous purchase.
+
+This purchase was Pompey, Mrs. Woffington's little black slave. It is a
+horrid fact, but Pompey did not love his mistress. He was a little
+enamored of her, as small boys are apt to be, but, on the whole, a
+sentiment of hatred slightly predominated in his little black bosom.
+
+It was not without excuse.
+
+This lady was subject to two unpleasant companions--sorrow and
+bitterness. About twice a week she would cry for two hours; and after
+this class of fit she generally went abroad, and made a round of certain
+poor or sick _proteges_ she had, and returned smiling and cheerful.
+
+But other twice a week she might be seen to sit upon her chair,
+contracted into half her size, and looking daggers at the universe in
+general, the world in particular; and on these occasions, it must be
+owned, she stayed at home, and sometimes whipped Pompey.
+
+Pompey had not the sense to reflect that he ought to have been whipped
+every day, or the _esprit de corps_ to be consoled by observing that this
+sort of thing did his mistress good. What he felt was, that his mistress,
+who did everything well, whipped him with energy and skill; it did not
+take ten seconds, but still, in that brief period, Pompey found himself
+dusted and polished off.
+
+The sacred principle of justice was as strong in Mrs. Woffington as in
+the rest of her sex; she had not one grain of it. When she was not in her
+tantrums, the mischievous imp was as sacred from check or remonstrance as
+a monkey or a lap-dog; and several female servants left the house on his
+account.
+
+But Nemesis overtook him in the way we have hinted, and it put his little
+black pipe out.
+
+The lady had taken him out of great humanity; he was fed like a
+game-cock, and dressed like a Barbaric prince; and once when he was ill
+his mistress watched him, and nursed him, and tended him with the same
+white hand that plied the obnoxious whip; and when he died, she alone
+withheld her consent from his burial, and this gave him a chance black
+boys never get, and he came to again; but still these tarnation lickings
+"stuck in him gizzard." So when Sir Charles's agent proposed to him
+certain silver coins, cheap at a little treachery, the ebony ape grinned
+till he turned half ivory, and became a spy in the house of his mistress.
+
+The reader will have gathered that the good Sir Charles had been quietly
+in London some hours before he announced himself as _paulo post futurum._
+
+Diamond cut diamond; a diplomat stole this march upon an actress, and
+took her black pawn. One for Pomander! (Gun.)
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+TRIPLET, the Cerberus of art, who had the first bark in this legend, and
+has since been out of hearing, ran from Lambeth to Covent Garden, on
+receipt of Mr. Vane's note. But ran he never so quick, he had built a
+full-sized castle in the air before he reached Bow Street.
+
+The letter hinted at an order upon his muse for amatory verse; delightful
+task, cheering prospect.
+
+Bid a man whose usual lot it is to break stones for the parish at
+tenpence the cubic yard--bid such an one play at marbles with some stone
+taws for half an hour per day, and pocket one pound one--bid a poor horse
+who has drawn those stones about, and browsed short grass by the
+wayside-- bid him canter a few times round a grassy ring, and then go to
+his corn--in short, bid Rosinante change with Pegasus, and you do no more
+than Mr. Vane's letter held out to Triplet.
+
+The amatory verse of that day was not up-hill work. There was a beaten
+track on a dead level, and you followed it. You told the tender creature,
+with a world of circumlocution, that, "without joking now," she was a
+leper, ditto a tigress, item marble. You next feigned a lucid interval,
+and to be on the point of detesting your monster, but in twenty more
+verses love became, as usual, stronger than reason, and you wound up your
+rotten yarn thus:
+
+You hugged a golden chain. You drew deeper into your wound a barbed
+shaft, like--(any wild animal will do, no one of them is such an ass, so
+you had an equal title to all). And on looking back you saw with horrible
+complacency that you had inflicted one hundred locusts, five feet long,
+upon oppressed humanity.
+
+Wont to travel over acres of canvas for a few shillings, and roods of
+paper on bare speculation, Triplet knew he could make a thousand a year
+at the above work without thinking.
+
+He came therefore to the box-keeper with his eyes glittering.
+
+"Mr. Vane?"
+
+"Just gone out with a gentleman."
+
+"I'll wait then."
+
+Now Mr. Vane, we know, was in the green-room, and went home by the
+stage-door. The last thing he thought of was poor Triplet; the rich do
+not dream how they disappoint the poor. Triplet's castle fell as many a
+predecessor had. When the lights were put out, he left the theater with a
+bitter sigh.
+
+"If this gentleman knew how many sweet children I have, and what a good,
+patient, suffering wife, sure he would not have chosen me to make a fool
+of!" said the poor fellow to himself.
+
+In Bow Street, he turned, and looked back upon the theater. How gloomy
+and grand it loomed!
+
+"Ah!" thought he, "if I could but conquer you; and why not? All history
+shows that nothing is unconquerable except perseverance. Hannibal
+conquered the Alps, and I'll conquer you," cried Triplet, firmly. "Yes,
+this visit is not lost; here I register a vow: I will force my way into
+that mountain of masonry, or perish in the attempt."
+
+Triplet's most unpremeditated thoughts and actions often savored
+ridiculously of the sublime. Then and there, gazing with folded arms on
+this fortress of Thespis, the polytechnic man organized his first
+assault. The next evening he made it.
+
+Five months previously he had sent the manager three great, large
+tragedies. He knew the aversion a theatrical manager has to read a
+manuscript play, not recommended by influential folk; an aversion which
+always has been carried to superstition. So he hit on the following
+scheme:
+
+He wrote Mr. Rich a letter; in this he told Mr. Rich that he (Triplet)
+was aware what a quantity of trash is offered every week to a manager,
+how disheartening it must be to read it at all, and how natural, after a
+while, to read none. Therefore, he (Triplet) had provided that Mr. Rich
+might economize his time, and yet not remain in ignorance of the dramatic
+treasure that lay ready to his hand.
+
+"The soul of a play," continued Triplet, "is the plot or fable. A
+gentleman of your experience can decide at once whether a plot or story
+is one to take the public!"
+
+So then he drew out, in full, the three plots. He wrote these plots in
+verse! Heaven forgive us all, he really did. There were also two margins
+left; on one, which was narrow, he jotted down the _locale_ per page of
+the most brilliant passages; on the other margin, which was as wide as
+the column of the plot, he made careful drawings of the personages in the
+principal dramatic situations; scrolls issued from their mouths, on which
+were written the words of fire that were flowing from each in these
+eruptions of the dramatic action. All was referred to pages in the
+manuscripts.
+
+"By this means, sir," resumed the latter, "you will gut my fish in a
+jiffy; permit me to recall that expression, with apologies for my
+freedom. I would say, you will, in a few minutes of your valuable
+existence, skim the cream of Triplet."
+
+This author's respect for the manager's time carried him into further and
+unusual details.
+
+"Breakfast," said he, "is a quiet meal. Let me respectfully suggest, that
+by placing one of my plots on the table, with, say, the sugar-basin upon
+it (this, again, is a mere suggestion), and the play it appertains to on
+your other side, you can readily judge my work without disturbing the
+avocations of the day, and master a play in the twinkling of a teacup;
+forgive my facetiousness. This day month, at ten of the clock, I shall
+expect," said Triplet, with sudden severity, "sir, your decision!"
+
+Then, gliding back to the courtier, he formally disowned all special
+title to the consideration he expected from Mr. Rich's well-known
+courtesy; still he begged permission to remind that gentleman that he
+had, six years ago, painted for him a large scene, illuminated by two
+great poetical incidents: a red sun, of dimensions never seen out of
+doors in this or any country; and an ocean of sand, yellower than up to
+that time had been attained in art or nature; and that once, when the
+audience, late in the evening, had suddenly demanded a popular song from
+Mr. Nokes, he (Triplet), seeing the orchestra thinned by desertion, and
+nugatory by intoxication, had started from the pit, resuscitated with the
+whole contents of his snuff-box the bass fiddle, snatched the leader's
+violin, and carried Mr. Nokes triumphantly through; that thunders of
+applause had followed, and Mr. Nokes had kindly returned thanks _for
+both;_ but that he (Triplet) had hastily retired to evade the manager's
+acknowledgments, preferring to wait an opportunity like the present, when
+both interests could be conciliated, etc.
+
+This letter he posted at its destination, to save time, and returned
+triumphant home. He had now forgiven and almost forgotten Vane; and had
+reflected that, after all, the drama was his proper walk.
+
+"My dear," said he to Mrs. Triplet, "this family is on the eve of a great
+triumph!" Then, inverting that order of the grandiloquent and the homely
+which he invented in our first chapter, he proceeded to say: "I have
+reared in a single day a new avenue by which histrionic greatness,
+hitherto obstructed, may become accessible. Wife, I think I have done the
+trick at last. Lysimachus!" added he, "let a libation be poured out on so
+smiling an occasion, and a burnt-offering rise to propitiate the
+celestial powers. Run to the 'Sun,' you dog. Three pennyworth of ale, and
+a hap'orth o' tobacco."
+
+Ere the month was out, I am sorry to say, the Triplets were reduced to a
+state of beggary. Mrs. Triplet's health had long been failing; and,
+although her duties at her little theater were light and occasional, the
+manager was obliged to discharge her, since she could not be depended
+upon.
+
+The family had not enough to eat! Think of that! They were not warm at
+night, and they felt gnawing and faintness often by day. Think of that!
+
+Fortune was unjust here. The man was laughable, and a goose; and had no
+genius either for writing, painting, or acting; but in that he resembled
+most writers, painters, and actors of his own day and ours. He was not
+beneath the average of what men call art, and it is art's
+antipodes--treadmill artifice.
+
+Other fluent ninnies shared gain, and even fame, and were called
+'penmen,' in Triplet's day. Other ranters were quietly getting rich by
+noise. Other liars and humbugs were painting out o' doors indoors, and
+eating mutton instead of thistles for drenched stinging-nettles, yclept
+trees; for block-tin clouds; for butlers' pantry seas, and
+garret-conceived lakes; for molten sugar-candy rivers; for airless
+atmosphere and sunless air; for carpet nature, and cold, dead fragments
+of an earth all soul and living glory to every cultivated eye but a
+routine painter's. Yet the man of many such mediocrities could not keep
+the pot boiling. We suspect that, to those who would rise in life, even
+strong versatility is a very doubtful good, and weak versatility
+ruination.
+
+At last, the bitter, weary month was gone, and Triplet's eye brightened
+gloriously. He donned his best suit; and, while tying his cravat,
+lectured his family. First, he complimented them upon their deportment in
+adversity; hinted that moralists, not experience, had informed him
+prosperity was far more trying to the character. Put them all solemnly on
+their guard down to Lucy, _aetat_ five, that they were _morituri_ and
+_ae,_ and must be pleased to abstain from "insolent gladness" upon his
+return.
+
+"Sweet are the uses of adversity!" continued this cheerful monitor. "If
+we had not been hard up this while, we should not come with a full relish
+to meat three times a week, which, unless I am an ass (and I don't see
+myself in that light)," said Triplet dryly, "will, I apprehend, be, after
+this day, the primary condition of our future existence."
+
+"James, take the picture with you," said Mrs. Triplet, in one of those
+calm, little, desponding voices that fall upon the soul so agreeably when
+one is a cock-a-hoop, and desires, with permission, so to remain.
+
+"What on earth am I to take Mrs. Woffington's portrait for?"
+
+"We have nothing in the house," said the wife, blushing.
+
+Triplet's eye glittered like a rattlesnake's.
+
+"The intimation is eccentric," said he. "Are you mad, Jane? Pray,"
+continued he, veiling his wrath in scornful words, "is it requisite,
+heroic, or judicious on the eve, or more correctly the morn, of affluence
+to deposit an unfinished work of art with a mercenary relation? Hang it,
+Jane! would you really have me pawn Mrs. Woffington to-day?"
+
+"James," said Jane steadily, "the manager may disappoint you, we have
+often been disappointed; so take the picture with you. They will give you
+ten shillings on it."
+
+Triplet was one of those who see things roseate, Mrs. Triplet lurid.
+
+"Madam," said the poet, "for the first time in our conjugal career, your
+commands deviate so entirely from reason that I respectfully withdraw
+that implicit obedience which has hitherto constituted my principal
+reputation. I'm hanged if I do it, Jane!"
+
+"Dear James, to oblige me!"
+
+"That alters the case; you confess it is unreasonable?"
+
+"Oh, yes! it is only to oblige me.
+
+"Enough!" said Triplet, whose tongue was often a flail that fell on
+friend, foe and self indiscriminately. "Allow it to be unreasonable, and
+I do it as a matter of course--to please you, Jane."
+
+Accordingly the good soul wrapped it in green baize; but to relieve his
+mind he was obliged to get behind his wife, and shrug his shoulders to
+Lysimachus and the eldest girl, as who should say _voila bien une femme
+votre mere a vous!_
+
+At last he was off, in high spirits. He reached Covent Garden at
+half-past ten, and there the poor fellow was sucked into our narrative
+whirlpool.
+
+We must, however, leave him for a few minutes,
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+SIR CHARLES POMANDER was detained in the country much longer than he
+expected.
+
+He was rewarded by a little adventure. As he cantered up to London with
+two servants and a post-boy, all riding on horses ordered in relays
+beforehand, he came up with an antediluvian coach, stuck fast by the
+road-side. Looking into the window, with the humane design of quizzing
+the elders who should be there, he saw a young lady of surpassing beauty.
+This altered the case; Sir Charles instantly drew bridle and offered his
+services.
+
+The lady thanked him, and being an innocent country lady, she opened
+those sluices, her eyes, and two tears gently trickled down, while she
+told him how eager she was to reach London, and how mortified at this
+delay.
+
+The good Sir Charles was touched. He leaped his horse over a hedge,
+galloped to a farm-house in sight, and returned with ropes and rustics.
+These and Sir Charles's horses soon drew the coach out of some stiffish
+clay.
+
+The lady thanked him, and thanked him, and thanked him, with heightening
+color and beaming eyes, and he rode away like a hero.
+
+Before he had gone five miles he became thoughtful and self-dissatisfied,
+finally his remorse came to a head; he called to him the keenest of his
+servants, Hunsdon, and ordered him to ride back past the carriage, then
+follow and put up at the same inn, to learn who the lady was, and whither
+going; and, this knowledge gained, to ride into town full speed and tell
+his master all about it. Sir Charles then resumed his complacency, and
+cantered into London that same evening.
+
+Arrived there, he set himself in earnest to cut out his friend with Mrs.
+Woffington. He had already caused his correspondence with that lady to
+grow warm and more tender, by degrees. Keeping a copy of his last, he
+always knew where he was. Cupid's barometer rose by rule; and so he
+arrived by just gradations at an artful climax, and made her in terms of
+chivalrous affection, an offer of a house, etc., three hundred a year,
+etc., not forgetting his heart, etc. He knew that the ladies of the stage
+have an ear for flattery and an eye to the main chance.
+
+The good Sir Charles felt sure that, however she might flirt with Vane or
+others, she would not forego a position for any disinterested _penchant._
+Still, as he was a close player, he determined to throw a little cold
+water on that flame. His plan, like everything truly scientific, was
+simple.
+
+"I'll run her down to him, and ridicule him to her," resolved this
+faithful friend and lover dear.
+
+He began with Vane. He found him just leaving his own house. After the
+usual compliments, some such dialogue as this took place between
+Telemachus and pseudo Mentor:
+
+"I trust you are not really in the power of this actress?"
+
+"You are the slave of a word," replied Vane. "Would you confound black
+and white because both are colors? She is like that sisterhood in nothing
+but a name. Even on the stage they have nothing in common. They are
+puppets--all attitude and trick; she is all ease, grace and nature."
+
+"Nature!" cried Pomander. _"Laissez-moi tranquille._ They have
+artifice--nature's libel. She has art--nature's counterfeit."
+
+"Her voice is truth told by music," cried the poetical lover; "theirs are
+jingling instruments of falsehood."
+
+"They are all instruments," said the satirist; "she is rather the best
+tuned and played."
+
+"Her face speaks in every lineament; theirs are rouged and wrinkled
+masks."
+
+"Her mask is the best made, mounted, and moved; that is all."
+
+"She is a fountain of true feeling."
+
+"No; a pipe that conveys it without spilling or holding a drop."
+
+"She is an angel of talent, sir."
+
+"She's a devil of deception."
+
+"She is a divinity to worship."
+
+"She's a woman to fight shy of. There is not a woman in London better
+known," continued Sir Charles. "She is a fair actress on the boards, and
+a great actress off them; but I can tell you how to add a new charm to
+her."
+
+"Heaven can only do that," said Vane, hastily.
+
+"Yes, you can. Make her blush. Ask her for the list of your
+predecessors."
+
+Vane winced visibly. He quickened his step, as if to get rid of this
+gadfly.
+
+"I spoke to Mr. Quin," said he, at last; "and he, who has no prejudice,
+paid her character the highest compliment."
+
+"You have paid it the highest it admits," was the reply. "You have let it
+deceive you." Sir Charles continued in a more solemn tone: "Pray be
+warned. Why is it every man of intellect loves an actress once in his
+life, and no man of sense ever did it twice?"
+
+This last hit, coming after the carte and tierce we have described,
+brought an expression of pain to Mr. Vane's face. He said abruptly:
+"Excuse me, I desire to be alone for half an hour."
+
+Machiavel bowed; and, instead of taking offense, said, in a tone full of
+feeling: "Ah! I give you pain! But you are right; think it calmly over a
+while, and you will see I advise you well."
+
+He then made for the theater, and the weakish personage he had been
+playing upon walked down to the river, almost ran, in fact. He wanted to
+be out of sight.
+
+He got behind some houses, and then his face seemed literally to break
+loose from confinement; so anxious, sad, fearful and bitter were the
+expressions that coursed each other over that handsome countenance.
+
+What is the meaning of these hot and cold fits? It is not Sir Charles who
+has the power to shake Mr. Vane so without some help from within. _There
+is something wrong about this man!_
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+MACHIAVEL entered the green-room, intending to wait for Mrs. Woffington,
+and carry out the second part of his plan.
+
+He knew that weak minds cannot make head against ridicule, and with this
+pickax he proposed to clear the way, before he came to grave, sensible,
+business love with the lady. Machiavel was a man of talent. If he has
+been a silent personage hitherto, it is merely because it was not his cue
+to talk, but listen; otherwise, he was rather a master of the art of
+speech. He could be insinuating, eloquent, sensible, or satirical, at
+will. This personage sat in the green-room. In one hand was his diamond
+snuffbox, in the other a richly laced handkerchief; his clouded cane
+reposed by his side.
+
+There was an air of success about this personage. The gentle reader,
+however conceited a dog, could not see how he was to defeat Sir Charles,
+who was tall, stout, handsome, rich, witty, self-sufficient, cool,
+majestic, courageous, and in whom were united the advantages of a hard
+head, a tough stomach, and no heart at all.
+
+This great creature sat expecting Mrs. Woffington, like Olympian Jove
+awaiting Juno. But he was mortal, after all; for suddenly the serenity of
+that adamantine countenance was disturbed; his eye dilated; his grace and
+dignity were shaken. He huddled his handkerchief into one pocket, his
+snuff-box into another, and forgot his cane. He ran to the door in
+unaffected terror.
+
+Where are all his fine airs before a real danger? Love, intrigue,
+diplomacy, were all driven from his mind; for he beheld that approaching,
+which is the greatest peril and disaster known to social man. He saw a
+bore coming into the room!
+
+In a wild thirst for novelty, Pomander had once penetrated to Goodman's
+Fields Theater; there he had unguardedly put a question to a carpenter
+behind the scene; a seedy-black poet instantly pushed the carpenter away
+(down a trap, it is thought), and answered it in seven pages, and in
+continuation was so vaguely communicative, that he drove Sir Charles back
+into the far west.
+
+Sir Charles knew him again in a moment, and at sight of him bolted. They
+met at the door. "Ah! Mr. Triplet!" said the fugitive, "enchanted -- to
+wish you good-morning!" and he plunged into the hiding-places of the
+theater.
+
+"That is a very polite gentleman!" thought Triplet. He was followed by
+the call-boy, to whom he was explaining that his avocations, though
+numerous, would not prevent his paying Mr. Rich the compliment of waiting
+all day in his green-room, sooner than go without an answer to three
+important propositions, in which the town and the arts were concerned.
+
+"What is your name?" said the boy of business to the man of words.
+
+"Mr. Triplet," said Triplet.
+
+"Triplet? There is something for you in the hall," said the urchin, and
+went off to fetch it.
+
+"I knew it," said Triplet to himself; "they are accepted. There's a note
+in the hall to fix the reading." He then derided his own absurdity in
+having ever for a moment desponded. "Master of three arts, by each of
+which men grow fat, how was it possible he should starve all his days!"
+
+He enjoyed a natural vanity for a few moments, and then came more
+generous feelings. What sparkling eyes there would be in Lambeth to-day!
+The butcher, at sight of Mr. Rich's handwriting, would give him credit.
+Jane should have a new gown.
+
+But when his tragedies were played, and he paid! El Dorado! His children
+should be the neatest in the street. Lysimachus and Roxalana should learn
+the English language, cost what it might; sausages should be diurnal; and
+he himself would not be puffed up, fat, lazy. No! he would work all the
+harder, be affable as ever, and, above all, never swamp the father,
+husband, and honest man in the poet and the blackguard of sentiment.
+
+Next his reflections took a business turn.
+
+"These tragedies--the scenery? Oh, I shall have to paint it myself. The
+heroes? Well, they have nobody who will play them as I should. (This was
+true!) It will be hard work, all this; but then I shall be paid for it.
+It cannot go on this way; I must and will be paid separately for my
+branches."
+
+Just as he came to this resolution, the boy returned with a brown-paper
+parcel, addressed to Mr. James Triplet. Triplet weighed it in his hand;
+it was heavy. "How is this?" cried he. "Oh, I see," said he, "these are
+the tragedies. He sends them to me for some trifling alterations;
+managers always do." Triplet then determined to adopt these alterations,
+if judicious; for, argued he, sensibly enough: "Managers are practical
+men; and we, in the heat of composition, sometimes _(sic?)_ say more than
+is necessary, and become tedious."
+
+With that he opened the parcel, and looked for Mr. Rich's communication;
+it was not in sight. He had to look between the leaves of the manuscripts
+for it; it was not there. He shook them; it did not fall out. He shook
+them as a dog shakes a rabbit; nothing!
+
+The tragedies were returned without a word. It took him some time to
+realize the full weight of the blow; but at last he saw that the manager
+of the Theater Royal, Covent Garden, declined to take a tragedy by
+Triplet into consideration or bare examination.
+
+He turned dizzy for a moment. Something between a sigh and a cry escaped
+him, and he sank upon a covered bench that ran along the wall. His poor
+tragedies fell here and there upon the ground, and his head went down
+upon his hands, which rested on Mrs. Woffington's picture. His anguish
+was so sharp, it choked his breath;, when he recovered it, his eye bent
+down upon the picture. "Ah, Jane," he groaned, "you know this villainous
+world better than I!" He placed the picture gently on the seat (that
+picture must now be turned into bread), and slowly stooped for his
+tragedies; they had fallen hither and thither; he had to crawl about for
+them; he was an emblem of all the humiliations letters endure.
+
+As he went after them on all-fours, more than one tear pattered on the
+dusty floor. Poor fellow! he was Triplet, and could not have died without
+tingeing the death-rattle with some absurdity; but, after all, he was a
+father driven to despair; a castle-builder, with his work rudely
+scattered; an artist, brutally crushed and insulted by a greater dunce
+than himself.
+
+Faint, sick, and dark, he sat a moment on the seat before he could find
+strength to go home and destroy all the hopes he had raised.
+
+While Triplet sat collapsed on the bench, fate sent into the room all in
+one moment, as if to insult his sorrow, a creature that seemed the
+goddess of gayety, impervious to a care. She swept in with a bold, free
+step, for she was rehearsing a man's part, and thundered without rant,
+but with a spirit and fire, and pace, beyond the conception of our poor
+tame actresses of 1852, these lines:
+
+"Now, by the joys Which my soul still has uncontrolled pursued, I would
+not turn aside from my least pleasure, Though all thy force were armed to
+bar my way; But, like the birds, great Nature's happy commoners, Rifle
+the sweets--"
+
+"I beg--your par--don, sir!" holding the book on a level with her eye,
+she had nearly run over "two poets instead of one."
+
+"Nay, madam," said Triplet, admiring, though sad, wretched, but polite,
+"pray continue. Happy the hearer, and still happier the author of verses
+so spoken. Ah!"
+
+"Yes," replied the lady, "if you could persuade authors what we do for
+them, when we coax good music to grow on barren words. Are you an author,
+sir?" added she, slyly.
+
+"In a small way, madam. I have here three trifles--tragedies."
+
+Mrs. Woffington looked askant at them, like a shy mare.
+
+"Ah, madam!" said Triplet, in one of his insane fits," if I might but
+submit them to such a judgment as yours?"
+
+He laid his hand on them. It was as when a strange dog sees us go to take
+up a stone.
+
+The actress recoiled.
+
+"I am no judge of such things," cried she, hastily.
+
+Triplet bit his lip. He could have killed her. It was provoking, people
+would rather be hanged than read a manuscript. Yet what hopeless trash
+they will read in crowds, which was manuscript a day ago. _Les
+imbeciles!_
+
+"No more is the manager of this theater a judge of such things," cried
+the outraged quill-driver, bitterly.
+
+"What! has he accepted them?" said needle-tongue.
+
+"No, madam, he has had them six months, and see, madam, he has returned
+them me without a word."
+
+Triplet's lip trembled.
+
+"Patience, my good sir," was the merry reply. "Tragic authors should
+possess that, for they teach it to their audiences. Managers, sir, are
+like Eastern monarchs, inaccessible but to slaves and sultanas. Do you
+know I called upon Mr. Rich fifteen times before I could see him?"
+
+"You, madam? Impossible!"
+
+"Oh, it was years ago, and he has paid a hundred pounds for each of those
+little visits. Well, now, let me see, fifteen times; you must write
+twelve more tragedies, and then he will read _one;_ and when he has read
+it, he will favor you with his judgment upon it; and when you have got
+that, you will have what all the world knows is not worth a farthing. He!
+he! he!
+
+'And like the birds, gay Nature's happy commoners, Rifle the sweets
+'--mum--mum--mum."
+
+Her high spirits made Triplet sadder. To think that one word from this
+laughing lady would secure his work a hearing, and that he dared not ask
+her. She was up in the world, he was down. She was great, he was nobody.
+He felt a sort of chill at this woman--all brains and no heart. He took
+his picture and his plays under his arms and crept sorrowfully away.
+
+The actress's eye fell on him as he went off like a fifth act. His Don
+Quixote face struck her. She had seen it before.
+
+"Sir," said she.
+
+"Madam," said Triplet, at the door.
+
+"We have met before. There, don't speak, I'll tell you who you are. Yours
+is a face that has been good to me, and I never forget them."
+
+"Me, madam!" said Triplet, taken aback. "I trust I know what is due to
+you better than to be good to you, madam," said he, in his confused way.
+
+"To be sure!" cried she, "it is Mr. Triplet, good Mr. Triplet!" And this
+vivacious dame, putting her book down, seized both Triplet's hands and
+shook them.
+
+He shook hers warmly in return out of excess of timidity, and dropped
+tragedies, and kicked at them convulsively when they were down, for fear
+they should be in her way, and his mouth opened, and his eyes glared.
+
+"Mr. Triplet," said the lady, "do you remember an Irish orange-girl you
+used to give sixpence to at Goodman's Fields, and pat her on the head and
+give her good advice, like a good old soul as you were? She took the
+sixpence."
+
+"Madam," said Trip, recovering a grain of pomp, "singular as it may
+appear, I remember the young person; she was very engaging. I trust no
+harm hath befallen her, for methought I discovered, in spite of her
+brogue, a beautiful nature in her."
+
+"Go along wid yer blarney," answered a rich brogue; "an' is it the
+comanther ye'd be putting on poor little Peggy?"
+
+"Oh! oh gracious!" gasped Triplet.
+
+"Yes," was the reply; but into that "yes" she threw a whole sentence of
+meaning. "Fine cha-ney oranges!" chanted she, to put the matter beyond
+dispute.
+
+"Am I really so honored as to have patted you on that queen-like head!"
+and he glared at it.
+
+"On the same head which now I wear," replied she, pompously. "I kept it
+for the convaynience hintirely, only there's more in it. Well, Mr.
+Triplet, you see what time has done for me; now tell me whether he has
+been as kind to you. Are you going to speak to me, Mr. Triplet?"
+
+As a decayed hunter stands lean and disconsolate, head poked forward like
+a goose's, but if hounds sweep by his paddock in full cry, followed by
+horses who are what he was not, he does, by reason of the good blood that
+is and will be in his heart, _dum spiritus hoss regit artus,_ cock his
+ears, erect his tail, and trot fiery to his extremest hedge, and look
+over it, nostril distended, mane flowing, and neigh the hunt onward like
+a trumpet; so Triplet, who had manhood at bottom, instead of whining out
+his troubles in the ear of encouraging beauty, as a sneaking spirit
+would, perked up, and resolved to put the best face upon it all before so
+charming a creature of the other sex.
+
+"Yes, madam," cried he, with the air of one who could have smacked his
+lips, "Providence has blessed me with an excellent wife and four charming
+children. My wife was Miss Chatterton; you remember her?"
+
+"Yes! Where is she playing now?"
+
+"Why, madam, her health is too weak for it."
+
+"Oh!--You were scene-painter. Do you still paint scenes?"
+
+"With the pen, madam, not the brush. As the wags said, I transferred the
+distemper from my canvas to my imagination." And Triplet laughed
+uproariously.
+
+When he had done, Mrs. Woffington, who had joined the laugh, inquired
+quietly whether his pieces had met with success.
+
+"Eminent--in the closet; the stage is to come!" and he smiled absurdly
+again.
+
+The lady smiled back.
+
+"In short," said Triplet, recapitulating, "being blessed with health, and
+more tastes in the arts than most, and a cheerful spirit, I should be
+wrong, madam, to repine; and this day, in particular, is a happy one,"
+added the rose colorist, "since the great Mrs. Woffington has deigned to
+remember me, and call me friend."
+
+Such was Triplet's summary.
+
+Mrs. Woffington drew out her memorandum-book, and took down her summary
+of the crafty Triplet's facts. So easy is it for us Triplets to draw the
+wool over the eyes of women and Woffingtons.
+
+"Triplet, discharged from scene-painting; wife, no engagement; four
+children supported by his pen--that is to say, starving; lose no time!"
+
+She closed her book; and smiled, and said:
+
+"I wish these things were comedies instead of trash-edies, as the French
+call them; we would cut one in half, and slice away the finest passages,
+and then I would act in it; and you would see how the stage-door would
+fly open at sight of the author."
+
+"O Heaven!" said poor Trip, excited by this picture. "I'll go home, and
+write a comedy this moment."
+
+"Stay!" said she; "you had better leave the tragedies with me."
+
+"My dear madam! You will read them?"
+
+"Ahem! I will make poor Rich read them."
+
+"But, madam, he has rejected them."
+
+"That is the first step. Reading them comes after, when it comes at all.
+What have you got in that green baize?"
+
+"In this green baize?"
+
+"Well, in this green baize, then."
+
+"Oh madam! nothing--nothing! To tell the truth, it is an adventurous
+attempt from memory. I saw you play Silvia, madam; I was so charmed, that
+I came every night. I took your face home with me--forgive my
+presumption, madam--and I produced this faint adumbration, which I expose
+with diffidence."
+
+So then he took the green baize off.
+
+The color rushed into her face; she was evidently gratified. Poor, silly
+Mrs. Triplet was doomed to be right about this portrait.
+
+"I will give you a sitting," said she. "You will find painting dull faces
+a better trade than writing dull tragedies. Work for other people's
+vanity, not your own; that is the art of art. And now I want Mr.
+Triplet's address."
+
+"On the fly-leaf of each work, madam," replied that florid author, "and
+also at the foot of every page which contains a particularly brilliant
+passage, I have been careful to insert the address of James Triplet,
+painter, actor, and dramatist, and Mrs. Woffington's humble, devoted
+servant." He bowed ridiculously low, and moved toward the door; but
+something gushed across his heart, and he returned with long strides to
+her. "Madam!" cried he, with a jaunty manner, "you have inspired a son of
+Thespis with dreams of eloquence, you have tuned in a higher key a poet's
+lyre, you have tinged a painter's existence with brighter colors,
+and--and--" His mouth worked still, but no more artificial words would
+come. He sobbed out, "and God in heaven bless you, Mrs. Woffington!" and
+ran out of the room.
+
+Mrs. Woffington looked after him with interest, for this confirmed her
+suspicions; but suddenly her expression changed, she wore a look we have
+not yet seen upon her--it was a half-cunning, half-spiteful look; it was
+suppressed in a moment, she gave herself to her book, and presently Sir
+Charles Pomander sauntered into the room.
+
+"Ah! what, Mrs. Woffington here?" said the diplomat.
+
+"Sir Charles Pomander, I declare!" said the actress.
+
+"I have just parted with an admirer of yours.
+
+"I wish I could part with them all," was the reply.
+
+"A pastoral youth, who means to win La Woffington by agricultural
+courtship--as shepherds woo in sylvan shades."
+
+"With oaten pipe the rustic maids,"
+
+quoth the Woffington, improvising.
+
+The diplomat laughed, the actress laughed, and said, laughingly: _"Tell
+me what he says word for word?"_
+
+"It will only make you laugh."
+
+"Well, and am I never to laugh, who provide so many laughs for you all?"
+
+_"C'est juste._ You shall share the general merriment. Imagine a romantic
+soul, who adores you for _your simplicity!"_
+
+"My simplicity! Am I so very simple?"
+
+"No," said Sir Charles, monstrous dryly. "He says you are out of place on
+the stage, and wants to take the star from its firmament, and put it in a
+cottage."
+
+"I am not a star," replied the Woffington, "I am only a meteor. And what
+does the man think I am to do without this (here she imitated applause)
+from my dear public's thousand hands?"
+
+"You are to have this" (he mimicked a kiss) "from a single mouth,
+instead."
+
+"He is mad! Tell me what more he says. Oh, don't stop to invent; I should
+detect you; and you would only spoil this man."
+
+He laughed conceitedly. "I should spoil him! Well, then, he proposes to
+be your friend rather than your lover, and keep you from being talked of,
+he! he! instead of adding to your _eclat."_
+
+"And if he is your friend, why don't you tell him my real character, and
+send him into the country?"
+
+She said this rapidly and with an appearance of earnest. The diplomatist
+fell into the trap.
+
+"I do," said he; "but he snaps his fingers at me and common sense and the
+world. I really think there is only one way to get rid of him, and with
+him of every annoyance."
+
+"Ah! that would be nice."
+
+"Delicious! I had the honor, madam, of laying certain proposals at your
+feet."
+
+"Oh! yes--your letter, Sir Charles. I have only just had time to run my
+eye down it. Let us examine it together."
+
+She took out the letter with a wonderful appearance of interest, and the
+diplomat allowed himself to fall into the absurd position to which she
+invited him. They put their two heads together over the letter.
+
+"'A coach, a country-house, pin-money'--and I'm so tired of houses and
+coaches and pins. Oh! yes, here's something; what is this you offer me,
+up in this corner?"
+
+Sir Charles inspected the place carefully, and announced that it was "his
+heart."
+
+"And he can't even write it!" said she. "That word is 'earth.' Ah! well,
+you know best. There is your letter, Sir Charles."
+
+She courtesied, returned him the letter, and resumed her study of
+Lothario.
+
+"Favor me with your answer, madam," said her suitor.
+
+"You have it," was the reply.
+
+"Madam, I don't understand your answer," said Sir Charles, stiffly.
+
+"I can't find you answers and understandings, too," was the lady-like
+reply. "You must beat my answer into your understanding while I beat this
+man's verse into mine.
+
+'And like the birds, etc.'"
+
+Pomander recovered himself a little; he laughed with quiet insolence.
+"Tell me," said he, "do you really refuse?"
+
+"My good soul," said Mrs. Woffington, "why this surprise! Are you so
+ignorant of the stage and the world as not to know that I refuse such
+offers as yours every week of my life?"
+
+"I know better," was the cool reply. She left it unnoticed.
+
+"I have so many of these," continued she, "that I have begun to forget
+they are insults."
+
+At this word the button broke off Sir Charles's foil.
+
+"Insults, madam! They are the highest compliments you have left it in our
+power to pay you."
+
+The other took the button off her foil.
+
+"Indeed!" cried she, with well-feigned surprise. "Oh! I understand. To be
+your mistress could be but a temporary disgrace; to be your wife would be
+a lasting discredit," she continued. "And now, sir, having played your
+rival's game, and showed me your whole hand" (a light broke in upon our
+diplomat), "do something to recover the reputation of a man of the world.
+A gentleman is somewhere about in whom you have interested me by your
+lame satire; pray tell him I am in the green-room, with no better
+companion than this bad poet."
+
+Sir Charles clinched his teeth.
+
+"I accept the delicate commission," replied he, "that you may see how
+easily the man of the world drops what the rustic is eager to pick up."
+
+"That is better," said the actress, with a provoking appearance of
+good-humor. "You have a woman's tongue, if not her wit; but, my good
+soul," added she, with cool _hauteur,_ "remember you have something to do
+of more importance than anything you can say."
+
+"I accept your courteous dismissal, madam," said Pomander, grinding his
+teeth. "I will send a carpenter for your swain. And I leave you."
+
+He bowed to the ground.
+
+"Thanks for the double favor, good Sir Charles."
+
+She courtesied to the floor.
+
+Feminine vengeance! He had come between her and her love. All very
+clever, Mrs. Actress; but was it wise?
+
+"I am revenged," thought Mrs. Woffington, with a little feminine smirk.
+
+"I will be revenged," vowed Pomander, clinching his teeth.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+COMPARE a November day with a May day. They are not more unlike than a
+beautiful woman in company with a man she is indifferent to or averse,
+and the same woman with the man of her heart by her side.
+
+At sight of Mr. Vane, all her coldness and _nonchalance_ gave way to a
+gentle complacency; and when she spoke to him, her voice, so clear and
+cutting in the late _assaut d'armes,_ sank of its own accord into the
+most tender, delicious tone imaginable.
+
+Mr. Vane and she made love. He pleased her, and she desired to please
+him. My reader knows her wit, her _finesse,_ her fluency; but he cannot
+conceive how god-like was her way of making love. I can put a few of the
+corpses of her words upon paper, but where are the heavenly tones--now
+calm and convincing, now soft and melancholy, now thrilling with
+tenderness, now glowing with the fiery eloquence of passion? She told him
+that she knew the map of his face; that for some days past he had been
+subject to an influence adverse to her. She begged him, calmly, for his
+own sake, to distrust false friends, and judge her by his own heart,
+eyes, and judgment. He promised her he would.
+
+"And I do trust you, in spite of them all," said he; "for your face is
+the shrine of sincerity and candor. I alone know you.
+
+Then she prayed him to observe the heartlessness of his sex, and to say
+whether she had done ill to hide the riches of her heart from the cold
+and shallow, and to keep them all for one honest man, "who will be my
+friend, I hope," said she, "as well as my lover."
+
+"Ah!" said Vane, "that is my ambition."
+
+"We actresses," said she, "make good the old proverb, 'Many lovers, but
+few friends.' And oh, 'tis we who need a friend. Will you be mine?"
+
+While he lived, he would.
+
+In turn, he begged her to be generous, and tell him the way for him,
+Ernest Vane, inferior in wit and address to many of her admirers, to win
+her heart from them all.
+
+This singular woman's answer is, I think, worth attention.
+
+"Never act in my presence; never try to be eloquent, or clever; never
+force a sentiment, or turn a phrase. Remember, I am the goddess of
+tricks. Do not descend to competition with me and the Pomanders of the
+world. At all littlenesses, you will ever be awkward in my eyes. And I am
+a woman. I must have a superior to love--lie open to my eye. Light itself
+is not more beautiful than the upright man, whose bosom is open to the
+day. Oh yes! fear not you will be my superior, dear; for in me honesty
+has to struggle against the habits of my art and life. Be simple and
+sincere, and I shall love you, and bless the hour you shone upon my cold,
+artificial life. Ah, Ernest!" said she, fixing on his eye her own, the
+fire of which melted into tenderness as she spoke, "be my friend. Come
+between me and the temptations of an unprotected life--the recklessness
+of a vacant heart."
+
+He threw himself at her feet. He called her an angel. He told her he was
+unworthy of her, but that he would try and deserve her. Then he
+hesitated, and trembling he said:
+
+"I will be frank and loyal. Had I not better tell you everything? You
+will not hate me for a confession I make myself?"
+
+"I shall like you better--oh! so much better!"
+
+"Then I will own to you--"
+
+"Oh, do not tell me you have ever loved before me! I could not bear to
+hear it!" cried this inconsistent personage.
+
+The other weak creature needed no more.
+
+"I see plainly I never loved but you," said he.
+
+"Let me hear that only!" cried she; "I am jealous even of the past. Say
+you never loved but me. Never mind whether it is true. My child, you do
+not even yet know love. Ernest, shall I make you love--as none of your
+sex ever loved--with heart, and brain, and breath, and life, and soul?"
+
+With these rapturous words, she poured the soul of love into his eyes; he
+forgot everything in the world but her; he dissolved in present happiness
+and vowed himself hers forever. And she, for her part, bade him but
+retain her esteem and no woman ever went further in love than she would.
+She was a true epicure. She had learned that passion, vulgar in itself,
+is god-like when based upon esteem.
+
+This tender scene was interrupted by the call-boy, who brought Mrs.
+Woffington a note from the manager, informing her there would be no
+rehearsal. This left her at liberty, and she proceeded to take a somewhat
+abrupt leave of Mr. Vane. He was endeavoring to persuade her to let him
+be her companion until dinner-time (she was to be his quest), when
+Pomander entered the room.
+
+Mrs. Woffington, however, was not to be persuaded, she excused herself on
+the score of a duty which she said she had to perform, and whispering as
+she passed Pomander, "Keep your own counsel," she went out rather
+precipitately.
+
+Vane looked slightly disappointed.
+
+Sir Charles, who had returned to see whether (as he fully expected) she
+had told Vane everything--and who, at that moment, perhaps, would not
+have been sorry had Mrs. Woffington's lover called him to serious
+account--finding it was not her intention to make mischief, and not
+choosing to publish his own defeat, dropped quietly into his old line,
+and determined to keep the lovers in sight, and play for revenge. He
+smiled and said: "My good sir, nobody can hope to monopolize Mrs.
+Woffington. She has others to do justice to besides you."
+
+To his surprise, Mr. Vane turned instantly round upon him, and, looking
+him haughtily in the face, said: "Sir Charles Pomander, the settled
+malignity with which you pursue that lady is unmanly and offensive to me,
+who love her. Let our acquaintance cease here, if you please, or let her
+be sacred from your venomous tongue."
+
+Sir Charles bowed stiffly, and replied, that it was only due to himself
+to withdraw a protection so little appreciated.
+
+The two friends were in the very act of separating forever, when who
+should run in but Pompey, the renegade. He darted up to Sir Charles, and
+said: "Massa Pomannah she in a coach, going to 10, Hercules Buildings.
+I'm in a hurry, Massa Pomannah."
+
+"Where?" cried Pomander. "Say that again."
+
+"10, Hercules Buildings, Lambeth. Me in a hurry, Massa Pomannah."
+
+"Faithful child, there's a guinea for thee. Fly!"
+
+The slave flew, and, taking a short cut, caught and fastened on to the
+slow vehicle in the Strand.
+
+"It is a house of rendezvous," said Sir Charles, half to himself, half to
+Mr. Vane. He repeated in triumph: "It is a house of rendezvous." He then,
+recovering his _sang-froid,_ and treating it all as a matter of course,
+explained that at 10, Hercules Buildings, was a fashionable shop, with
+entrances from two streets; that the best Indian scarfs and shawls were
+sold there, and that ladies kept their carriages waiting an immense time
+in the principal street, while they were supposed to be in the shop, or
+the show-room. He then went on to say that he had only this morning heard
+that the intimacy between Mrs. Woffington and a Colonel Murthwaite,
+although publicly broken off for prudential reasons, was still
+clandestinely carried on. She had, doubtless, slipped away to meet the
+colonel.
+
+Mr. Vane turned pale.
+
+"No! I will not suspect. I will not dog her like a bloodhound," cried he.
+
+"I will!" said Pomander.
+
+"You! By what right?"
+
+"The right of curiosity. I will know whether it is you who are imposed
+on, or whether you are right, and all the world is deceived in this
+woman."
+
+He ran out; but, for all his speed, when he got into the street there was
+the jealous lover at his elbow. They darted with all speed into the
+Strand; got a coach. Sir Charles, on the box, gave Jehu a guinea, and
+took the reins--and by a Niagara of whipcord they attained Lambeth; and
+at length, to his delight, Pomander saw another coach before him with a
+gold-laced black slave behind it. The coach stopped; and the slave came
+to the door. The shop in question was a few hundred yards distant. The
+adroit Sir Charles not only stopped but turned his coach, and let the
+horses crawl back toward London; he also flogged the side panels to draw
+the attention of Mr. Vane. That gentleman looked through the little
+circular window at the back of the vehicle, and saw a lady paying the
+coachman. There was no mistaking her figure. This lady, then, followed at
+a distance by her slave, walked on toward Hercules Buildings; and it was
+his miserable fate to see her look uneasily round, and at last glide in
+at a side door, close to the silk-mercer's shop.
+
+The carriage stopped. Sir Charles came himself to the door.
+
+"Now, Vane," said he, "before I consent to go any further in this
+business, you must promise me to be cool and reasonable. I abhor
+absurdity; and there must be no swords drawn for this little hypocrite."
+
+"I submit to no dictation," said Vane, white as a sheet.
+
+"You have benefited so far by my knowledge," said the other politely;
+"let me, who am self-possessed, claim some influence with you."
+
+"Forgive me!" said poor Vane. "My ang--my sorrow that such an angel
+should be a monster of deceit." He could say no more.
+
+They walked to the shop.
+
+"How she peeped, this way and that," said Pomander, "sly little Woffy!
+
+"No! on second thoughts," said he, "it is the other street we must
+reconnoiter; and, if we don't see her there, we will enter the shop, and
+by dint of this purse we shall soon untie the knot of the Woffington
+riddle."
+
+Vane leaned heavily on his tormentor.
+
+"I am faint," said he.
+
+"Lean on me, my dear friend," said Sir Charles. "Your weakness will leave
+you in the next street."
+
+In the next street they discovered--nothing. In the shop, they found--no
+Mrs. Woffington. They returned to the principal street. Vane began to
+hope there was no positive evidence. Suddenly three stories up a fiddle
+was heard. Pomander took no notice, but Vane turned red; this put Sir
+Charles upon the scent.
+
+"Stay!" said he. "Is not that an Irish tune?"
+
+Vane groaned. He covered his face with his hands, and hissed out:
+
+"It is her favorite tune."
+
+"Aha!" said Pomander. "Follow me!"
+
+They crept up the stairs, Pomander in advance; they heard the signs of an
+Irish orgie--a rattling jig played and danced with the inspiriting
+interjections of that frolicsome nation. These sounds ceased after a
+while, and Pomander laid his hand on his friend's shoulder.
+
+"I prepare you," said he, "for what you are sure to see. This woman was
+an Irish bricklayer's daughter, and 'what is bred in the bone never comes
+out of the flesh;' you will find her sitting on some Irishman's knee,
+whose limbs are ever so much stouter than yours. You are the man of her
+head, and this is the man of her heart. These things would be monstrous,
+if they were not common; incredible, if we did not see them every day.
+But this poor fellow, whom probably she deceives as well as you, is not
+to be sacrificed like a dog to your unjust wrath; he is as superior to
+her as you are to him."
+
+"I will commit no violence," said Vane. "I still hope she is innocent."
+
+Pomander smiled, and said he hoped so too.
+
+"And if she is what you think, I will but show her she is known, and,
+blaming myself as much as her--oh yes! more than her!--I will go down
+this night to Shropshire, and never speak word to her again in this world
+or the next."
+
+"Good," said Sir Charles.
+
+"'Le bruit est pour le fat, la plainte est pour le sot, L'honndete homine
+trompe s'eloigne et ne dit mot.'
+
+Are you ready?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then follow me."
+
+Turning the handle gently, he opened the door like lightning, and was in
+the room. Vane's head peered over his shoulder. She was actually there!
+
+For once in her life, the cautious, artful woman was taken by surprise.
+She gave a little scream, and turned as red as fire. But Sir Charles
+surprised somebody else even more than he did poor Mrs. Woffington.
+
+It would be impertinent to tantalize my reader, but I flatter myself this
+history is not written with power enough to do that, and I may venture to
+leave him to guess whom Sir Charles Pomander surprised more than he did
+the actress, while I go back for the lagging sheep.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+JAMES TRIPLET, water in his eye, but fire in his heart, went home on
+wings. Arrived there, he anticipated curiosity by informing all hands he
+should answer no questions. Only in the intervals of a work, which was to
+take the family out of all its troubles, he should gradually unfold a
+tale, verging on the marvelous--a tale whose only fault was, that
+fiction, by which alone the family could hope to be great, paled beside
+it. He then seized some sheets of paper fished out some old dramatic
+sketches, and a list of _dramatis personae,_ prepared years ago, and
+plunged into a comedy. As he wrote, true to his promise, he painted,
+Triplet-wise, that story which we have coldly related, and made it
+appear, to all but Mrs. Triplet, that he was under the tutela, or express
+protection of Mrs. Woffington, who would push his fortunes until the only
+difficulty would be to keep arrogance out of the family heart.
+
+Mrs. Triplet groaned aloud. "You have brought the picture home, I see,"
+said she.
+
+"Of course I have. She is going to give me a sitting."
+
+"At what hour, of what day?" said Mrs. Triplet, with a world of meaning.
+
+"She did not say," replied Triplet, avoiding his wife's eye.
+
+"I know she did not," was the answer. "I would rather you had brought me
+the ten shillings than this fine story," said she.
+
+"Wife!" said Triplet, "don't put me into a frame of mind in which
+successful comedies are not written." He scribbled away; but his wife's
+despondency told upon the man of disappointments. Then he stuck fast;
+then he became fidgety.
+
+"Do keep those children quiet!" said the father.
+
+"Hush, my dears," said the mother; "let your father write. Comedy seems
+to give you more trouble than tragedy, James," added she, soothingly.
+
+"Yes," was his answer. "Sorrow comes somehow more natural to me; but for
+all that I have got a bright thought, Mrs. Triplet. Listen, all of you.
+You see, Jane, they are all at a sumptuous banquet, all the _dramatis
+personae,_ except the poet."
+
+Triplet went on writing, and reading his work out: "Music, sparkling
+wine, massive plate, rose-water in the hand-glasses, soup, fish--shall I
+have three sorts of fish? I will; they are cheap in this market. Ah!
+Fortune, you wretch, here at least I am your master, and I'll make you
+know it-- venison," wrote Triplet, with a malicious grin, "game, pickles
+and provocatives in the center of the table; then up jumps one of the
+guests, and says he--"
+
+"Oh dear, I am so hungry."
+
+This was not from the comedy, but from one of the boys.
+
+"And so am I," cried a girl.
+
+"That is an absurd remark, Lysimachus," said Triplet with a suspicious
+calmness. "How can a boy be hungry three hours after breakfast?"
+
+"But, father, there was no breakfast for breakfast."
+
+"Now I ask you, Mrs. Triplet," appealed the author, "how I am to write
+comic scenes if you let Lysimachus and Roxalana here put the heavy
+business in every five minutes?"
+
+"Forgive them; the poor things are hungry."
+
+"Then let them be hungry in another room," said the irritated scribe.
+"They shan't cling round my pen, and paralyze it, just when it is going
+to make all our fortunes; but you women," snapped Triplet the Just, "have
+no consideration for people's feelings. Send them all to bed; every man
+Jack of them!"
+
+Finding the conversation taking this turn, the brats raised a unanimous
+howl.
+
+Triplet darted a fierce glance at them. "Hungry, hungry," cried he; "is
+that a proper expression to use before a father who is sitting down here,
+all gayety" (scratching wildly with his pen) "and hilarity" (scratch) "to
+write a com--com--" he choked a moment; then in a very different voice,
+all sadness and tenderness, he said: "Where's the youngest--where's Lucy?
+As if I didn't know you are hungry."
+
+Lucy came to him directly. He took her on his knee, pressed her gently to
+his side, and wrote silently. The others were still.
+
+"Father," said Lucy, aged five, the germ of a woman, "I am not tho very
+hungry.
+
+"And I am not hungry at all," said bluff Lysimachus, taking his sister's
+cue; then going upon his own tact he added, "I had a great piece of bread
+and butter yesterday!"
+
+"Wife, they will drive me mad!" and he dashed at the paper.
+
+The second boy explained to his mother, _sotto voce:_ "Mother, he _made_
+us hungry out of his book."
+
+"It is a beautiful book," said Lucy. "Is it a cookery book?"
+
+Triplet roared: "Do you hear that?" inquired he, all trace of ill-humor
+gone. "Wife," he resumed, after a gallant scribble, "I took that sermon I
+wrote."
+
+"And beautiful it was, James. I'm sure it quite cheered me up with
+thinking that we shall all be dead before so very long."
+
+"Well, the reverend gentleman would not have it. He said it was too hard
+upon sin. 'You run at the Devil like a mad bull,' said he. 'Sell it in
+Lambeth, sir; here calmness and decency are before everything,' says he.
+'My congregation expect to go to heaven down hill. Perhaps the chaplain
+of Newgate might give you a crown for it,' said he," and Triplet dashed
+viciously at the paper. "Ah!" sighed he, "if my friend Mrs. Woffington
+would but drop these stupid comedies and take to tragedy, this house
+would soon be all smiles."
+
+"Oh James!" replied Mrs. Triplet, almost peevishly, "how can you expect
+anything but fine words from that woman? You won't believe what all the
+world says. You will trust to your own good heart."
+
+"I haven't a good heart," said the poor, honest fellow. "I spoke like a
+brute to you just now."
+
+"Never mind, James," said the woman. "I wonder how you put up with me at
+all--a sick, useless creature. I often wish to die, for your sake. I know
+you would do better. I am such a weight round your neck."
+
+The man made no answer, but he put Lucy gently down, and went to the
+woman, and took her forehead to his bosom, and held it there; and after a
+while returned with silent energy to his comedy.
+
+"Play us a tune on the fiddle, father."
+
+"Ay, do, husband. That helps you often in your writing."
+
+Lysimachus brought him the fiddle, and Triplet essayed a merry tune; but
+it came out so doleful, that he shook his head, and laid the instrument
+down. Music must be in the heart, or it will come out of the
+fingers--notes, not music.
+
+"No," said he; "let us be serious and finish this comedy slap off.
+Perhaps it hitches because I forgot to invoke the comic muse. She must be
+a black-hearted jade, if she doesn't come with merry notions to a poor
+devil, starving in the midst of his hungry little ones."
+
+"We are past help from heathen goddesses," said the woman. "We must pray
+to Heaven to look down upon us and our children."
+
+The man looked up with a very bad expression on his countenance.
+
+"You forget," said he sullenly, "our street is very narrow, and the
+opposite houses are very high."
+
+"James!"
+
+"How can Heaven be expected to see what honest folk endure in so dark a
+hole as this?" cried the man, fiercely.
+
+"James," said the woman, with fear and sorrow, "what words are these?"
+
+The man rose and flung his pen upon the floor.
+
+"Have we given honesty a fair trial-- yes or no?"
+
+"No!" said the woman, without a moment's hesitation; "not till we die, as
+we have lived. Heaven is higher than the sky; children," said she, lest
+perchance her husband's words should have harmed their young souls, "the
+sky is above the earth, and heaven is higher than the sky; and Heaven is
+just."
+
+"I suppose it is so," said the man, a little cowed by her. "Everybody
+says so. I think so, at bottom, myself; but I can't see it. I want to see
+it, but I can't!" cried he, fiercely. "Have my children offended Heaven?
+They will starve--they will die! If I was Heaven, I'd be just, and send
+an angel to take these children's part. They cried to me for bread--I had
+no bread; so I gave them hard words. The moment I had done that I knew it
+was all over. God knows it took a long while to break my heart; but it is
+broken at last; quite, quite broken! broken! broken!"
+
+And the poor thing laid his head upon the table, and sobbed, beyond all
+power of restraint. The children cried round him, scarce knowing why; and
+Mrs. Triplet could only say, "My poor husband!" and prayed and wept upon
+the couch where she lay.
+
+It was at this juncture that a lady, who had knocked gently and unheard,
+opened the door, and with a light step entered the apartment; but no
+sooner had she caught sight of Triplet's anguish, than, saying hastily,
+"Stay, I forgot something," she made as hasty an exit.
+
+This gave Triplet a moment to recover himself; and Mrs. Woffington, whose
+lynx eye had comprehended all at a glance, and who had determined at once
+what line to take, came flying in again, saying:
+
+"Wasn't somebody inquiring for an angel? Here I am. See, Mr. Triplet;"
+and she showed him a note, which said: "Madam, you are an angel. From a
+perfect stranger," explained she; "so it must be true."
+
+"Mrs. Woffington," said Mr. Triplet to his wife. Mrs. Woffington planted
+herself in the middle of the floor, and with a comical glance, setting
+her arms akimbo, uttered a shrill whistle.
+
+"Now you will see another angel--there are two sorts of them."
+
+Pompey came in with a basket; she took it from him.
+
+"Lucifer, avaunt!" cried she, in a terrible tone, that drove him to the
+wall; "and wait outside the door," added she, conversationally.
+
+"I heard you were ill, ma'am, and I have brought you some physic -- black
+draughts from Burgundy;" and she smiled. And, recovered from their first
+surprise, young and old began to thaw beneath that witching, irresistible
+smile. "Mrs. Triplet, I have come to give your husband a sitting; will
+you allow me to eat my little luncheon with you? I am so hungry." Then
+she clapped her hands, and in ran Pompey. She sent him for a pie she
+professed to have fallen in love with at the corner of the street.
+
+"Mother," said Alcibiades, "will the lady give me a bit of her pie?"
+
+"Hush! you rude boy!" cried the mother.
+
+"She is not much of a lady if she does not," cried Mrs. Woffington. "Now,
+children, first let us look at--ahem--a comedy. Nineteen _dramatis
+personae!_ What do you say, children, shall we cut out seven, or nine?
+that is the question. You can't bring your armies into our drawing-rooms,
+Mr. Dagger-and-bowl. Are you the Marlborough of comedy? Can you marshal
+battalions on a turkey carpet, and make gentlefolks witty in platoons?
+What is this in the first act? A duel, and both wounded! You butcher!"
+
+"They are not to die, ma'am!" cried Triplet, deprecatingly "upon my
+honor," said he, solemnly, spreading his bands on his bosom.
+
+"Do you think I'll trust their lives with you? No! Give me a pen; this is
+the way we run people through the body." Then she wrote ("business."
+Araminta looks out of the garret window. Combatants drop their swords,
+put their hands to their hearts, and stagger off O. P. and P. S.) "Now,
+children, who helps me to lay the cloth?"
+
+"I!"
+
+"And I!" (The children run to the cupboard.)
+
+_Mrs. Triplet_ (half rising). "Madam, I--can't think of allowing you."
+
+Mrs. Woffington replied: "Sit down, madam, or I must use brute force. If
+you are ill, be ill--till I make you well. Twelve plates, quick!
+Twenty-four knives, quicker! Forty-eight forks quickest!" She met the
+children with the cloth and laid it; then she met them again and laid
+knives and forks, all at full gallop, which mightily excited the bairns.
+Pompey came in with the pie, Mrs. Woffington took it and set it before
+Triplet.
+
+_Mrs. Woffington._ "Your coat, Mr. Triplet, if you please."
+
+_Mr. Triplet._ "My coat, madam!"
+
+_Mrs. Woffington._ "Yes, off with it-- there's a hole in it--and carve."
+Then she whipped to the other end of the table and stitched like
+wild-fire. "Be pleased to cast your eyes on that, Mrs. Triplet. Pass it
+to the lady, young gentleman. Fire away, Mr. Triplet, never mind us
+women. Woffington's housewife, ma'am, fearful to the eye, only it holds
+everything in the world, and there is a small space for everything
+else--to be returned by the bearer. Thank you, sir." (Stitches away like
+lightning at the coat.) "Eat away, children! now is your time; when once
+I begin, the pie will soon end; I do everything so quick."
+
+_Roxalana._ "The lady sews quicker than you, mother."
+
+_Woffington._ "Bless the child, don't come so near my sword-arm; the
+needle will go into your eye, and out at the back of your head."
+
+This nonsense made the children giggle.
+
+"The needle will be lost--the child no more--enter undertaker--house
+turned topsy-turvy--father shows Woffington to the door--off she goes
+with a face as long and dismal as some people's comedies--no
+names--crying fine chan-ey oranges."
+
+The children, all but Lucy, screeched with laughter.
+
+Lucy said gravely:
+
+"Mother, the lady is very funny."
+
+"You will be as funny when you are as well paid for it."
+
+This just hit poor Trip's notion of humor, and he began to choke, with
+his mouth full of pie.
+
+"James, take care," said Mrs. Triplet, sad and solemn.
+
+James looked up.
+
+"My wife is a good woman, madam," said he; "but deficient in an important
+particular."
+
+"Oh, James!"
+
+"Yes, my dear. I regret to say you have no sense of humor; nummore than a
+cat, Jane."
+
+"What! because the poor thing can't laugh at your comedy?"
+
+"No, ma'am; but she laughs at nothing."
+
+"Try her with one of your tragedies, my lad."
+
+"I am sure, James," said the poor, good, lackadaisical woman, "if I don't
+laugh, it is not for want of the will. I used to be a very hearty
+laugher," whined she; "but I haven't laughed this two years."
+
+"Oh, indeed!" said the Woffington. "Then the next two years you shall do
+nothing else."
+
+"Ah, madam!" said Triplet. "That passes the art, even of the great
+comedian."
+
+"Does it?" said the actress, coolly.
+
+_Lucy._ "She is not a comedy lady. You don't ever cry, pretty lady?"
+
+_Woffington_ (ironically). "Oh, of course not."
+
+_Lucy_ (confidentially). "Comedy is crying. Father cried all the time he
+was writing his one."
+
+Triplet turned red as fire.
+
+"Hold your tongue," said he. "I was bursting with merriment. Wife, our
+children talk too much; they put their noses into everything, and
+criticise their own father."
+
+"Unnatural offspring!" laughed the visitor.
+
+"And when they take up a notion, Socrates couldn't convince them to the
+contrary. For instance, madam, all this morning they thought fit to
+assume that they were starving."
+
+"So we were," said Lysimachus, "until the angel came; and the devil went
+for the pie."
+
+"There--there--there! Now, you mark my words; we shall never get that
+idea out of their heads--"
+
+"Until," said Mrs. Woffington, lumping a huge cut of pie into Roxalana's
+plate, "we put a very different idea into their stomachs." This and the
+look she cast on Mrs. Triplet fairly caught that good, though somber
+personage. She giggled; put her hand to her face, and said: "I'm sure I
+ask your pardon, ma'am."
+
+It was no use; the comedian had determined they should all laugh, and
+they were made to laugh. Then she rose, and showed them how to drink
+healths _a la Francaise;_ and keen were her little admirers to touch her
+glass with theirs. And the pure wine she had brought did Mrs. Triplet
+much good, too; though not so much as the music and sunshine of her face
+and voice. Then, when their stomachs were full of good food, and the soul
+of the grape tingled in their veins, and their souls glowed under her
+great magnetic power, she suddenly seized the fiddle, and showed them
+another of her enchantments. She put it on her knee, and played a tune
+that would have made gout, cholic and phthisic dance upon their last
+legs. She played to the eye as well as to the ear, with such a smart
+gesture of the bow, and such a radiance of face as she. looked at them,
+that whether the music came out of her wooden shell, or her horse-hair
+wand, or her bright self, seemed doubtful. They pranced on their chairs;
+they could not keep still. She jumped up; so did they. She gave a wild
+Irish horroo. She put the fiddle in Triplet's hand.
+
+"The wind that shakes the barley, ye divil!" cried she.
+
+Triplet went _hors de lui;_ he played like Paganini, or an intoxicated
+demon. Woffington covered the buckle in gallant style; she danced, the
+children danced. Triplet fiddled and danced, and flung his limbs in wild
+dislocation: the wineglasses danced; and last, Mrs. Triplet was observed
+to be bobbing about on her sofa, in a monstrous absurd way, droning out
+the tune, and playing her hands with mild enjoyment, all to herself.
+Woffington pointed out this pantomimic soliloquy to the two boys, with a
+glance full of fiery meaning. This was enough. With a fiendish yell, they
+fell upon her, and tore her, shrieking, off the sofa. And lo! when she
+was once launched, she danced up to her husband, and set to him with a
+meek deliberation that was as funny as any part of the scene. So then the
+mover of all this slipped on one side, and let the stone of merriment -
+roll--and roll it did; there was no swimming, sprawling, or irrelevant
+frisking; their feet struck the ground for every note of the fiddle, pat
+as its echo, their faces shone, their hearts leaped, and their poor
+frozen natures came out, and warmed themselves at the glowing melody; a
+great sunbeam had come into their abode, and these human motes danced in
+it. The elder ones recovered their gravity first, they sat down
+breathless, and put their hands to their hearts; they looked at one
+another, and then at the goddess who had revived them. Their first
+feeling was wonder; were they the same, who, ten minutes ago, were
+weeping together? Yes! ten minutes ago they were rayless, joyless,
+hopeless. Now the sun was in their hearts, and sorrow and sighing were
+fled, as fogs disperse before the god of day. It was magical; could a
+mortal play upon the soul of man, woman and child like this? Happy
+Woffington! and suppose this was more than half acting, but such acting
+as Triplet never dreamed of; and to tell the honest, simple truth, I
+myself should not have suspected it; but children are sharper than one
+would think, and Alcibiades Triplet told, in after years, that, when they
+were all dancing except the lady, he caught sight of her face--and it was
+quite, quite grave, and even sad; but, as often as she saw him look at
+her, she smiled at him so gayly--he couldn't believe it was the same
+face.
+
+If it was art, glory be to such art so worthily applied! and honor to
+such creatures as this, that come like sunshine into poor men's houses,
+and tune drooping hearts to daylight and hope!
+
+The wonder of these worthy people soon changed to gratitude. Mrs.
+Woffington stopped their mouths at once.
+
+"No, no!" cried she; "if you really love me, no scenes; I hate them. Tell
+these brats to kiss me, and let me go. I must sit for my picture after
+dinner; it is a long way to Bloomsbury Square."
+
+The children needed no bidding; they clustered round her, and poured out
+their innocent hearts as children only do.
+
+"I shall pray for you after father and mother," said one.
+
+"I shall pray for you after daily bread," said Lucy, "because we were
+_tho_ hungry till you came!"
+
+"My poor children!" cried Woffington, and hard to grown-up actors, as she
+called us, but sensitive to children, she fairly melted as she embraced
+them.
+
+It was at this precise juncture that the door was unceremoniously opened,
+and the two gentlemen burst upon the scene!
+
+My reader now guesses whom Sir Charles Pomander surprised more than he
+did Mrs. Woffington. He could not for the life of him comprehend what she
+was doing, and what was her ulterior object. The _nil admirari_ of the
+fine gentleman deserted him, and he gazed open-mouthed, like the veriest
+chaw-bacon.
+
+The actress, unable to extricate herself in a moment from the children,
+stood there like Charity, in New College Chapel, while the mother kissed
+her hand, and the father quietly dropped tears, like some leaden water
+god in the middle of a fountain.
+
+Vane turned hot and cold by turns, with joy and shame. Pomander's genius
+came to the aid of their embarrassment.
+
+"Follow my lead," whispered he. "What! Mrs. Woffington here!" cried he;
+then he advanced business-like to Triplet. "We are aware, sir, of your
+various talents, and are come to make a demand on them. I, sir, am the
+unfortunate possessor of frescoes; time has impaired their indelicacy, no
+man can restore it as you can."
+
+"Augh! sir! sir!" said the gratified goose.
+
+"My Cupid's bows are walking-sticks, and my Venus's noses are snubbed.
+You must set all that straight on your own terms, Mr. Triplet."
+
+"In a single morning all shall bloom again, sir! Whom would you wish them
+to resemble in feature? I have lately been praised for my skill in
+portraiture." (Glancing at Mrs. Woffington.)
+
+"Oh!" said Pomander, carelessly, "you need not go far for Venuses and
+Cupids, I suppose?"
+
+"I see, sir; my wife and children. Thank you, sir; thank you."
+
+Pomander stared; Mrs. Woffington laughed.
+
+Now it was Vane's turn.
+
+"Let me have a copy of verses from your pen. I shall have five pounds at
+your disposal for them."
+
+"The world has found me out!" thought Triplet, blinded by his vanity.--
+"The subject, sir?"
+
+"No matter," said Vane--"no matter."
+
+"Oh, of course it does not matter to me," said Triplet, with some
+_hauteur,_ and assuming poetic omnipotence. "Only, when one knows the
+subject, one can sometimes make the verses apply better."
+
+"Write then, since you are so confident, upon Mrs. Woffington."
+
+"Ah! that is a subject! They shall be ready in an hour!" cried Trip, in
+whose imagination Parnassus was a raised counter. He had in a teacup some
+lines on Venus and Mars which he could not but feel would fit Thalia and
+Croesus, or Genius and Envy, equally well. "In one hour, sir," said
+Triplet, "the article shall be executed, and delivered at your house."
+
+Mrs. Woffington called Vane to her, with an engaging smile. A month ago
+he would have hoped she would not have penetrated him and Sir Charles;
+but he knew her better now. He came trembling.
+
+"Look me in the face, Mr. Vane," said she, gently, but firmly.
+
+"I cannot!" said he. "How can I ever look you in the face again?"
+
+"Ah! you disarm me! But I must strike you, or this will never end. Did I
+not promise that, when you had earned my _if_ esteem, I would tell
+you--what no mortal knows--Ernest, my whole story? I delay the
+confession. It will cost me so many blushes, so many tears! And yet I
+hope, if you knew all, you would pity and forgive me. Meantime, did I
+ever tell you a falsehood?"
+
+"Oh no!"
+
+"Why doubt me then, when I tell you that I hold all your sex cheap but
+you? Why suspect me of Heaven knows what, at the dictation of a
+heartless, brainless fop--on the word of a known liar, like the world?"
+
+Black lightning flashed from her glorious eyes as she administered this
+royal rebuke. Vane felt what a poor creature he was, and his face showed
+such burning shame and contrition, that he obtained his pardon without
+speaking.
+
+"There," said she, kindly, "do not let us torment one another. I forgive
+you. Let me make you happy, Ernest. Is that a great favor to ask? I can
+make you happier than your brightest dream of happiness, if you will let
+yourself be happy."
+
+They rejoined the others; but Vane turned his back on Pomander, and would
+not look at him.
+
+"Sir Charles," said Mrs. Woffington gayly; for she scorned to admit the
+fine gentleman to the rank of a permanent enemy, "you will be of our
+party, I trust, at dinner?"
+
+"Why, no, madam; I fear I cannot give myself that pleasure to-day." Sir
+Charles did not choose to swell the triumph. "Mr. Vane, good day!" said
+he, rather dryly. "Mr. Triplet--madam--your most obedient!" and,
+self-possessed at top, but at bottom crestfallen, he bowed himself away.
+
+Sir Charles, however, on descending the stair and gaining the street,
+caught sight of a horseman, riding uncertainly about, and making his
+horse curvet, to attract attention.
+
+He soon recognized one of his own horses, and upon it the servant he had
+left behind to dog that poor innocent country lady. The servant sprang
+off his horse and touched his hat. He informed his master that he had
+kept with the carriage until ten o'clock this morning, when he had ridden
+away from it at Barnet, having duly pumped the servants as opportunity
+offered.
+
+"Who is she?" cried Sir Charles.
+
+"Wife of a Cheshire squire, Sir Charles," was the reply.
+
+"His name? Whither goes she in town?"
+
+"Her name is Mrs. Vane, Sir Charles. She is going to her husband."
+
+"Curious!" cried Sir Charles. "I wish she had no husband. No! I wish she
+came from Shropshire," and he chuckled at the notion.
+
+"If you please, Sir Charles," said the man, "is not Willoughby in
+Cheshire?"
+
+"No," cried his master; "it is in Shropshire. What! eh! Five guineas for
+you if that lady comes from Willoughby in Shropshire.
+
+"That is where she comes from then, Sir Charles, and she is going to
+Bloomsbury Square."
+
+"How long have they been married?"
+
+"Not more than twelve months, Sir Charles."
+
+Pomander gave the man ten guineas instead of five on the spot.
+
+Reader, it was too true! Mr. Vane--the good, the decent, the
+churchgoer--Mr. Vane, whom Mrs. Woffington had selected to improve her
+morals--Mr. Vane was a married man!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+As soon as Pomander had drawn his breath and realized this discovery, he
+darted upstairs, and with all the demure calmness he could assume, told
+Mr. Vane, whom he met descending, that he was happy to find his
+engagements permitted him to join the party in Bloomsbury Square. He then
+flung himself upon his servant's horse.
+
+Like Iago, he saw the indistinct outline of a glorious and a most
+malicious plot; it lay crude in his head and heart at present; thus much
+he saw clearly, that, if he could time Mrs. Vane's arrival so that she
+should pounce upon the Woffington at her husband's table, he might be
+present at and enjoy the public discomfiture of a man and woman who had
+wounded his vanity. Bidding his servant make the best of his way to
+Bloomsbury Square, Sir Charles galloped in that direction himself,
+intending first to inquire whether Mrs. Vane was arrived, and, if not, to
+ride toward Islington and meet her. His plan was frustrated by an
+accident; galloping round a corner, his horse did not change his leg
+cleverly, and, the pavement being also loose, slipped and fell on his
+side, throwing his rider upon the _trottoir._ The horse got up and
+trembled violently, but was unhurt. The rider lay motionless, except that
+his legs quivered on the pavement. They took him up and conveyed him into
+a druggist's shop, the master of which practiced chirurgery. He had to be
+sent for; and, before he could be found, Sir Charles recovered his
+reason, so much so, that when the chirurgeon approached with his fleam to
+bleed him, according to the practice of the day, the patient drew his
+sword, and assured the other he would let out every drop of blood in his
+body if he touched him.
+
+He of the shorter but more lethal weapon hastily retreated. Sir Charles
+flung a guinea on the counter, and mounting his horse rode him off rather
+faster than before this accident.
+
+There was a dead silence!
+
+"I believe that gentleman to be the Devil!" said a thoughtful bystander.
+The crowd (it was a century ago) assented _nem. con._
+
+Sir Charles, arrived in Bloomsbury Square, found that the whole party was
+assembled. He therefore ordered his servant to parade before the door,
+and, if he saw Mrs. Vane 's carriage enter the Square, to let him know,
+if possible, before she should reach the house. On entering he learned
+that Mr. Vane and his guests were in the garden (a very fine one), and
+joined them there.
+
+Mrs. Vane demands another chapter, in which I will tell the reader who
+she was, and what excuse her husband had for his liaison with Margaret
+Woffington.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+MABEL CHESTER was the beauty and toast of South Shropshire. She had
+refused the hand of half the country squires in a circle of some dozen
+miles, till at last Mr. Vane became her suitor. Besides a handsome face
+and person, Mr. Vane had accomplishments his rivals did not possess. He
+read poetry to her on mossy banks an hour before sunset, and awakened
+sensibilities which her other suitors shocked, and they them.
+
+The lovely Mabel had a taste for beautiful things, without any excess of
+that severe quality called judgment.
+
+I will explain. If you or I, reader, had read to her in the afternoon,
+amid the smell of roses and eglantine, the chirp of the mavis, the hum of
+bees, the twinkling of butterflies, and the tinkle of distant sheep,
+something that combined all these sights, and sounds, and smells--say
+Milton's musical picture of Eden, P. L., lib. 3, and after that "Triplet
+on Kew," she would have instantly pronounced in favor of "Eden"; but if
+_we_ had read her "Milton," and Mr. Vane had read her "Triplet," she
+would have as unhesitatingly preferred "Kew" to "Paradise."
+
+She was a true daughter of Eve; the lady, who, when an angel was telling
+her and her husband the truths of heaven in heaven's own music, slipped
+away into the kitchen, because she preferred hearing the story at
+second-hand, encumbered with digressions, and in mortal but marital
+accents.
+
+When her mother, who guarded Mabel like a dragon, told her Mr. Vane was
+not rich enough, and she really must not give him so many opportunities,
+Mabel cried and embraced the: dragon, and said, "Oh, mother!" The dragon,
+finding her ferocity dissolving, tried to shake her off, but the goose
+would cry and embrace the dragon till it melted.
+
+By and by Mr. Vane's uncle died suddenly and left him the great Stoken
+Church estate, and a trunk full of Jacobuses and Queen Anne's
+guineas--his own hoard and his father's--then the dragon spake
+comfortably and said: "My child, he is now the richest man in Shropshire.
+He will not think of you now; so steel your heart."
+
+Then Mabel, contrary to all expectations, did not cry; but, with flushing
+cheek, pledged her life upon Ernest's love and honor: and Ernest, as soon
+as the funeral, etc., left him free, galloped to Mabel, to talk of our
+good fortune. The dragon had done him injustice; that was not his weak
+point. So they were married! and they were very, very happy. But, one
+month after, the dragon died, and that was their first grief; but they
+bore it together.
+
+And Vane was not like the other Shropshire squires. His idea of pleasure
+was something his wife could share. He still rode, walked, and sat with
+her, and read to her, and composed songs for her, and about her, which
+she played and sang prettily enough, in her quiet, lady-like way, and in
+a voice of honey dropping from the comb. Then she kept a keen eye upon
+him; and, when she discovered what dishes he liked, she superintended
+those herself; and, observing that he never failed to eat of a certain
+lemon-pudding the dragon had originated, she always made this pudding
+herself, and she never told her husband she made it.
+
+The first seven months of their marriage was more like blue sky than
+brown earth; and if any one had told Mabel that her husband was a mortal,
+and not an angel, sent to her that her days and nights might be unmixed,
+uninterrupted heaven, she could hardly have realized the information.
+
+When a vexatious litigant began to contest the will by which Mr. Vane was
+Lord of Stoken Church, and Mr. Vane went up to London to concert the
+proper means of defeating this attack, Mrs. Vane would gladly have
+compounded by giving the man two or three thousand acres or the whole
+estate, if he wouldn't take less, not to rob her of her husband for a
+month; but she was docile, as she was amorous; so she cried (out of
+sight) a week; and let her darling go with every misgiving a loving heart
+could have; but one! and that one her own heart told her was impossible.
+
+The month rolled away--no symptom of a return. For this, Mr. Vane was
+not, in fact, to blame; but, toward the end of the next month, business
+became a convenient excuse. When three months had passed, Mrs. Vane
+became unhappy. She thought he too must feel the separation. She offered
+to come to him. He answered uncandidly. He urged the length, the fatigue
+of the journey. She was silenced; but some time later she began to take a
+new view of his objections. "He is so self-denying," said she. "Dear
+Ernest, he longs for me; but he thinks it selfish to let me travel so far
+alone to see him."
+
+Full of this idea, she yielded to her love. She made her preparations,
+and wrote to him, that, if he did not forbid her peremptorily, he must
+expect to see her at his breakfast-table in a very few days.
+
+Mr. Vane concluded this was a jest, and did not answer this letter at
+all.
+
+Mrs. Vane started. She traveled with all speed; but, coming to a halt at
+----, she wrote to her husband that she counted on being with him at four
+of the clock on Thursday.
+
+This letter preceded her arrival by a few hours. It was put into his hand
+at the same time with a note from Mrs. Woffington, telling him she should
+be at a rehearsal at Covent Garden. Thinking his wife's letter would
+keep, he threw it on one side into a sort of a tray; and, after a hurried
+breakfast, went out of his house to the theater. He returned, as we are
+aware, with Mrs. Woffington; and also, at her request, with Mr. Cibber,
+for whom they had called on their way. He had forgotten his wife's
+letter, and was entirely occupied with his guests.
+
+Sir Charles Pomander joined them, and found Mr. Colander, the head
+domestic of the London establishment, cutting with a pair of scissors
+every flower Mrs. Woffington fancied, that lady having a passion for
+flowers.
+
+Colander, during his temporary absence from the interior, had appointed
+James Burdock to keep the house, and receive the two remaining guests,
+should they arrive.
+
+This James Burdock was a faithful old country servant, who had come up
+with Mr. Vane, but left his heart at Willoughby. James Burdock had for
+some time been ruminating, and his conclusion was, that his mistress,
+Miss Mabel (as by force of habit he called her), was not treated as she
+deserved.
+
+Burdock had been imported into Mr. Vane's family by Mabel; he had carried
+her in his arms when she was a child; he had held her upon a donkey when
+she was a little girl; and when she became a woman, it was he who taught
+her to stand close to her horse, and give him her foot and spring while
+he lifted her steadily but strongly into her saddle, and, when there, it
+was he who had instructed her that a horse was not a machine, that
+galloping tires it in time, and that galloping it on the hard road
+hammers it to pieces. "I taught the girl," thought James within himself.
+
+This honest silver-haired old fellow seemed so ridiculous to Colander,
+the smooth, supercilious Londoner, that he deigned sometimes to converse
+with James, in order to quiz him. This very morning they had had a
+conversation.
+
+"Poor Miss Mabel! dear heart. A twelvemonth married, and nigh six months
+of it a widow, or next door."
+
+"We write to her, James, and entertain her replies, which are at
+considerable length."
+
+"Ay, but we don't read 'em!" said James, with an uneasy glance at the
+tray.
+
+"Invariably, at our leisure; meantime we make ourselves happy among the
+wits and the sirens."
+
+"And she do make others happy among the poor and the ailing."
+
+"Which shows," said Colander, superciliously, "the difference of tastes."
+
+Burdock, whose eye had never been off his mistress's handwriting, at last
+took it up and said: "Master Colander, do if ye please, sir, take this
+into master's dressing-room, do now?"
+
+Colander looked down on the missive with dilating eye. "Not a bill, James
+Burdock," said he, reproachfully.
+
+"A bill! bless ye, no. A letter from missus."
+
+No, the dog would not take it in to his master; and poor James, with a
+sigh, replaced it in the tray.
+
+This James Burdock, then, was left in charge of the hall by Colander, and
+it so happened that the change was hardly effected before a hurried
+knocking came to the street door.
+
+"Ay, ay!" grumbled Burdock," I thought it would not be long. London for
+knocking and ringing all day, and ringing and knocking all night." He
+opened the door reluctantly and suspiciously, and in darted a lady, whose
+features were concealed by a hood. She glided across the hall, as if she
+was making for some point, and old James shuffled after her, crying:
+"Stop, stop! young woman. What is your name, young woman?"
+
+"Why, James Burdock," cried the lady, removing her hood, "have you
+forgotten your mistress?"
+
+"Mistress! Why, Miss Mabel, I ask your pardon, madam--here, John,
+Margery!"
+
+"Hush!" cried Mrs. Vane.
+
+"But where are your trunks, miss? And where's the coach, and Darby and
+Joan? To think of their drawing you all the way here! I'll have 'em into
+your room directly, ma'am. Miss, you've come just in time."
+
+"What a dear, good, stupid old thing you are, James. Where is Ernest--Mr.
+Vane? James, is he well and happy? I want to surprise him."
+
+"Yes, ma'am," said James, looking down.
+
+"I left the old stupid coach at Islington, James. The something--pin was
+loose, or I don't know what. Could I wait two hours there? So I came on
+by myself; you wicked old man, you let me talk, and don't tell me how he
+is."
+
+"Master is main well, ma'am, and thank you," said old Burdock, confused
+and uneasy.
+
+"But is he happy? Of course he is. Are we not to meet to-day after six
+months? Ah! but never mind, they _are_ gone by."
+
+"Lord bless her!" thought the faithful old fellow. "If sitting down and
+crying could help her, I wouldn't be long."
+
+By this time they were in the banqueting-room and at the preparations
+there Mabel gave a start; she then colored. "Oh, he has invited his
+friends to make acquaintance. I had rather we had been alone all this day
+and to-morrow. But he must not know that. No; _his_ friends are _my_
+friends, and shall be too," thought the country wife. She then glanced
+with some misgiving at her traveling attire, and wished she had brought
+_one_ trunk with her.
+
+"James," said she, "where is my room? And, mind, I forbid you to tell a
+soul I am come."
+
+"Your room, Miss Mabel?"
+
+"Well, any room where there is looking-glass and water."
+
+She then went to a door which opened in fact on a short passage leading
+to a room occupied by Mr. Vane himself.
+
+"No, no!" cried James. "That is master's room."
+
+"Well, is not master's room mistress's room, old man? But stay; is he
+there?"
+
+"No, ma'am; he is in the garden, with a power of fine folks."
+
+"They shall not see me till I have made myself a little more decent,"
+said the young beauty, who knew at bottom how little comparatively the
+color of her dress could affect her appearance, and she opened Mr. Vane's
+door and glided in.
+
+Burdock's first determination was, in spite of her injunction, to tell
+Colander; but on reflection he argued: "And then what will they do? They
+will put their heads together, and deceive us some other way. No!"
+thought James, with a touch of spite, "we shall see how they will all
+look." He argued also, that, at sight of his beautiful wife, his master
+must come to his senses, and the Colander faction be defeated; and
+perhaps, by the mercy of Providence, Colander himself turned off.
+
+While thus ruminating, a thundering knock at the door almost knocked him
+off his legs. "There ye go again," said he, and he went angrily to the
+door. This time it was Hunsdon, who was in a desperate hurry to see his
+master.
+
+"Where is Sir Charles Pomander, my honest fellow?" said he.
+
+"In the garden, my Jack-a-dandy!" said Burdock, furiously.
+
+(" Honest fellow," among servants, implies some moral inferiority.)
+
+In the garden went Hunsdon. His master--all whose senses were playing
+sentinel--saw him, and left the company to meet him.
+
+"She is in the house, sir."
+
+"Good! Go--vanish!"
+
+Sir Charles looked into the banquet-room; the haunch was being placed on
+the table. He returned with the information. He burned to bring husband
+and wife together; he counted each second lost that postponed this (to
+him) thrilling joy. Oh, how happy he was!--happier than the serpent when
+he saw Eve's white teeth really strike into the apple!
+
+"Shall we pay respect to this haunch, Mr. Quin?" said Vane, gayly.
+
+"If you please, sir," said Quin, gravely. Colander ran down a by-path
+with an immense bouquet, which he arranged for Mrs. Woffington in a vase
+at Mr. Vane's left hand. He then threw open the windows, which were on
+the French plan, and shut within a foot of the lawn.
+
+The musicians in the arbor struck up, and the company, led by Mr. Vane
+and Mrs. Woffington, entered the room. And a charming room it
+was!--light, lofty, and large--adorned in the French way with white and
+gold. The table was an exact oval, and at it everybody could hear what
+any one said; an excellent arrangement where ideaed guests only are
+admitted-- which is another excellent arrangement, though I see people
+don't think so.
+
+The repast was luxurious and elegant. There was no profusion of unmeaning
+dishes; each was a _bonne-bouche_--an undeniable delicacy. The glass was
+beautiful, the plates silver. The flowers rose like walls from the table;
+the plate massive and glorious; rose-water in the hand-glasses; music
+crept in from the garden, deliciously subdued into what seemed a natural
+sound. A broad stream of southern sun gushed in fiery gold through the
+open window, and, like a red-hot rainbow, danced through the stained
+glass above it. Existence was a thing to bask in--in such a place, and so
+happy an hour!
+
+The guests were Quin, Mrs. Clive, Mr. Cibber, Sir Charles Pomander, Mrs.
+Woffington, and Messrs. Soaper and Snarl, critics of the day. This pair,
+with wonderful sagacity, had arrived from the street as the haunch came
+from the kitchen. Good-humor reigned; some cuts passed, but as the
+parties professed wit, they gave and took.
+
+Quin carved the haunch, and was happy; Soaper and Snarl eating the same,
+and drinking Toquay, were mellowed and mitigated into human flesh. Mr.
+Vane and Mrs. Woffington were happy; he, because his conscience was
+asleep; and she, because she felt nothing now could shake her hold of
+him. Sir Charles was in a sort of mental chuckle. His head burned, his
+bones ached; but he was in a sort of nervous delight.
+
+"Where is she?" thought he. "What will she do? Will she send her maid
+with a note? How blue he will look! Or will she come herself? She is a
+country wife; there must be a scene. Oh, why doesn't she come into this
+room? She must know we are here! is she watching somewhere?" His brain
+became puzzled, and his senses were sharpened to a point; he was all eye,
+ear and expectation; and this was why he was the only one to hear a very
+slight sound behind the door we have mentioned, and next to perceive a
+lady's glove lying close to that door. Mabel had dropped it in her
+retreat. Putting this and that together, he was led to hope and believe
+she was there, making her toilet, perhaps, and her arrival at present
+unknown.
+
+"Do you expect no one else?" said he, with feigned carelessness, to Mr.
+Vane.
+
+"No," said Mr. Vane, with real carelessness.
+
+"It must be so! What fortune!" thought Pomander.
+
+_Soaper._ "Mr. Cibber looks no older than he did five years ago."
+
+_Snarl._ "There was no room on his face for a fresh wrinkle."
+
+_Soaper._ "He! he! Nay, Mr. Snarl: Mr. Cibber is like old port; the more
+ancient he grows, the more delicious his perfume."
+
+_Snarl._ "And the crustier he gets."
+
+_Clive._ "Mr. Vane, you should always separate those two. Snarl, by
+himself, is just supportable; but, when Soaper paves the way with his
+hypocritical praise, the pair are too much; they are a two-edged sword."
+
+_Woffington._ "Wanting nothing but polish and point."
+
+_Vane._ "Gentlemen, we abandon your neighbor, Mr. Quin, to you."
+
+_Quin._ "They know better. If they don't keep a civil tongue in their
+heads, no fat goes from here to them."
+
+_Cibber._ "Ah, Mr. Vane; this room is delightful; but it makes me sad. I
+knew this house in Lord Longueville's time; an unrivaled gallant, Peggy.
+You may just remember him, Sir Charles?"
+
+_Pomander_ (with his eye on a certain door). "Yes, yes; a gouty old
+fellow."
+
+Cibber fired up. "I wish you may ever be like him. Oh, the beauty, the
+wit, the _petits-soupers_ that used to be here! Longueville was a great
+creature, Mr. Vane. I have known him entertain a fine lady in this room,
+while her rival was fretting and fuming on the other side of that door."
+
+"Ah, indeed!" said Sir Charles.
+
+"More shame for him," said Mr. Vane.
+
+Here was luck! Pomander seized this opportunity of turning the
+conversation to his object. With a malicious twinkle in his eye, he
+inquired of Mr. Cibber what made him fancy the house had lost its virtue
+in Mr. Vane's hands.
+
+"Because," said Cibber, peevishly, "you all want the true _savoir faire_
+nowadays, because there is no _juste milieu,_ young gentlemen. The young
+dogs of the day are all either unprincipled heathen, like yourself, or
+Amadisses, like our worthy host." The old gentleman's face and manners
+were like those of a patriarch, regretting the general decay of virtue,
+not the imaginary diminution of a single vice. He concluded with a sigh
+that, "The true _preux des dames_ went out with the full periwig; stap my
+vitals!"
+
+"A bit of fat, Mr. Cibber?" said Quin, whose jokes were not polished.
+
+"Jemmy, thou art a brute," was the reply.
+
+"You refuse, sir?" said Quin, sternly.
+
+"No, sir!" said Cibber, with dignity. "I accept."
+
+Pomander's eye was ever on the door.
+
+"The old are so unjust to the young," said he. "You pretend that the
+Deluge washed away iniquity, and that a rake is a fossil. What," said he,
+leaning as it were on every word, "if I bet you a cool hundred that Vane
+has a petticoat in that room, and that Mrs. Woffington shall unearth
+her?"
+
+The malicious dog thought this was the surest way to effect a dramatic
+exposure, because if Peggy found Mabel to all appearances concealed,
+Peggy would scold her, and betray herself.
+
+"Pomander!" cried Vane, in great heat; then, checking himself, he said
+coolly: "but you all know Pomander."
+
+"None of you," replied that gentleman. "Bring a chair, sir," said he,
+authoritatively, to a servant; who, of course, obeyed.
+
+Mrs. Clive looked at him, and thought: "There is something in this!"
+
+"It is for the lady," said he, coolly. Then, leaning over the table, he
+said to Mrs. Woffington, with an impudent affectation of friendly
+understanding: "I ran her to earth in this house not ten minutes ago. Of
+course I don't know who she is! But," smacking his lips, "a rustic
+Amaryllis, breathing all May-buds and Meadowsweet."
+
+"Have her out, Peggy!" shouted Cibber. "I know the run--there's the
+covert! Hark, forward! Ha, ha, ha!"
+
+Mr. Vane rose, and, with a sternness that brought the old beau up with a
+run, he said: "Mr. Cibber, age and infirmity are privileged; but for you,
+Sir Charles--"
+
+"Don't be angry," interposed Mrs. Woffington, whose terror was lest he
+should quarrel with so practiced a swordsman. "Don't you see it is a
+jest! and, as might be expected from poor Sir Charles, a very sorry one.
+
+"A jest!" said Vane, white with rage. "Let it go no further, or it will
+be earnest!"
+
+Mrs. Woffington placed her hand on his shoulder, and at that touch he
+instantly yielded, and sat down.
+
+It was at this moment, when Sir Charles found himself for the present
+baffled--for he could no longer press his point, and search that room;
+when the attention of all was drawn to a dispute, which, for a moment,
+had looked like a quarrel; while Mrs. Woffington's hand still lingered,
+as only a woman's hand can linger in leaving the shoulder of the man she
+loves; it was at this moment the door opened of its own accord, and a
+most beautiful woman stood, with a light step, upon the threshold!
+
+Nobody's back was to her, except Mr. Vane's. Every eye but his was
+spellbound upon her.
+
+Mrs. Woffington withdrew her hand, as if a scorpion had touched her.
+
+A stupor of astonishment fell on them all.
+
+Mr. Vane, seeing the direction of all their eyes, slewed himself round in
+his chair into a most awkward position, and when he saw the lady, he was
+utterly dumfounded! But she, as soon as he turned his face her way,
+glided up to him, with a little half-sigh, half-cry of joy, and taking
+him round the neck, kissed him deliciously, while every eye at the table
+met every other eye in turn. One or two of the men rose; for the lady's
+beauty was as worthy of homage as her appearing was marvelous.
+
+Mrs. Woffington, too astonished for emotion to take any definite shape,
+said, in what seemed an ordinary tone: "Who is this lady?"
+
+"I am his wife, madam," said Mabel, in the voice of a skylark, and
+smiling friendly on the questioner.
+
+"It is my wife!" said Vane, like a speaking-machine; he was scarcely in a
+conscious state. "It is my wife!" he repeated, mechanically.
+
+The words were no sooner out of Mabel's mouth than two servants, who had
+never heard of Mrs. Vane before, hastened to place on Mr. Vane's right
+hand the chair Pomander had provided, a plate and napkin were there in a
+twinkling, and the wife modestly, but as a matter of course, courtesied
+low, with an air of welcome to all her guests, and then glided into the
+seat her servants obsequiously placed before her.
+
+The whole thing did not take half a minute!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+MR. VANE, besides being a rich, was a magnificent man; when his features
+were in repose their beauty had a wise and stately character. Soaper and
+Snarl had admired and bitterly envied him. At the present moment no one
+of his guests envied him--they began to realize his position. And he, a
+huge wheel of shame and remorse, began to turn and whir before his eyes.
+He sat between two European beauties, and, pale and red by turns, shunned
+the eyes of both, and looked down at his plate in a cold sweat of
+humiliation, mortification and shame.
+
+The iron passed through Mrs. Woffington's soul. So! this was a villain,
+too, the greatest villain of all--a hypocrite! She turned. very faint,
+but she was under an enemy's eye, and under a rival's; the thought drove
+the blood back from her heart, and with a mighty effort she was
+Woffington again. Hitherto her liaison with Mr. Vane had called up the
+better part of her nature, and perhaps our reader has been taking her for
+a good woman; but now all her dregs were stirred to the surface. The
+mortified actress gulled by a novice, the wronged and insulted woman, had
+but two thoughts; to defeat her rival--to be revenged on her false lover.
+More than one sharp spasm passed over her features before she could
+master them, and then she became smiles above, wormwood and red-hot steel
+below--all in less than half a minute.
+
+As for the others, looks of keen intelligence passed between them, and
+they watched with burning interest for the _denouement._ That interest
+was stronger than their sense of the comicality of all this (for the
+humorous view of what passes before our eyes comes upon cool reflection,
+not often at the time).
+
+Sir Charles, indeed, who had foreseen some of this, wore a demure look,
+belied by his glittering eye. He offered Cibber snuff, and the two
+satirical animals grinned over the snuff-box, like a malicious old ape
+and a mischievous young monkey.
+
+The newcomer was charming; she was above the middle height, of a full,
+though graceful figure, her abundant, glossy, bright brown hair glittered
+here and there like gold in the light; she had a snowy brow, eyes of the
+profoundest blue, a cheek like a peach, and a face beaming candor and
+goodness; the character of her countenance resembled "the Queen of the
+May," in Mr. Leslie's famous picture, more than any face of our day I can
+call to mind.
+
+"You are not angry with me for this silly trick?" said she, with some
+misgiving. "After all I am only two hours before my time; you know,
+dearest, I said four in my letter--did I not?"
+
+Vane stammered. What could he say?
+
+"And you have had three days to prepare you, for I wrote, like a good
+wife, to ask leave before starting; but he never so much as answered my
+letter, madam." (This she addressed to Mrs. Woffington, who smiled by
+main force.)
+
+"Why," stammered Vane, "could you doubt? I--I--"
+
+"No! Silence was consent, was it not? But I beg your pardon, ladies and
+gentlemen, I hope you will forgive me. It is six months since I saw
+him--so you understand--I warrant me you did not look for me so soon,
+ladies?"
+
+"Some of us did not look for you at all, madam," said Mrs. Woffington.
+
+"What, Ernest did not tell you he expected me?"
+
+"No! He told us this banquet was in honor of a lady's first visit to his
+house, but none of us imagined that lady to be his wife."
+
+Vane began to writhe under that terrible tongue, whose point hitherto had
+ever been turned away from him.
+
+"He intended to steal a march on us," said Pomander, dryly; "and, with
+your help, we steal one on him;" and he smiled maliciously on Mrs.
+Woffington.
+
+"But, madam," said Mr. Quin, "the moment you did arrive, I kept sacred
+for you a bit of the fat; for which, I am sure, you must be ready. Pass
+her plate!"
+
+"Not at present, Mr. Quin," said Mr. Vane, hastily. "She is about to
+retire and change her traveling-dress."
+
+"Yes, dear; but, you forget, I am a stranger to your friends. Will you
+not introduce me to them first?"
+
+"No, no!" cried Vane, in trepidation. "It is not usual to introduce in
+the _beau monde."_
+
+"We always introduce ourselves," rejoined Mrs. Woffington. She rose
+slowly, with her eye on Vane. He cast a look of abject entreaty on her;
+but there was no pity in that curling lip and awful eye. He closed his
+own eyes and waited for the blow. Sir Charles threw himself back in his
+chair, and, chuckling, prepared for the explosion. Mrs. Woffington saw
+him, and cast on him a look of ineffable scorn; and then she held the
+whole company fluttering a long while. At length: "The Honorable Mrs.
+Quickly, madam," said she, indicating Mrs. Clive.
+
+This turn took them all by surprise. Pomander bit his lip.
+
+"Sir John Brute--"
+
+"Falstaff," cried Quin; "hang it."
+
+"Sir John Brute Falstaff," resumed Mrs. Woffington. "We call him, for
+brevity, Brute."
+
+Vane drew a long breath. "Your neighbor is Lord Foppington; a butterfly
+of some standing, and a little gouty."
+
+"Sir Charles Pomander."
+
+"Oh," cried Mrs. Vane. "It is the good gentleman who helped us out of the
+slough, near Huntingdon. Ernest, if it had not been for this gentleman, I
+should not have had the pleasure of being here now." And she beamed on
+the good Pomander.
+
+Mr. Vane did not rise and embrace Sir Charles.
+
+"All the company thanks the good Sir Charles," said Cibber, bowing.
+
+"I see it in all their faces," said the good Sir Charles, dryly.
+
+Mrs. Woffington continued: "Mr. Soaper, Mr. Snarl; gentlemen who would
+butter and slice up their own fathers!"
+
+"Bless me!" cried Mrs. Vane, faintly.
+
+"Critics!" And she dropped, as it were, the word dryly, with a sweet
+smile, into Mabel's plate.
+
+Mrs. Vane was relieved; she had apprehended cannibals. London they had
+told her was full of curiosities.
+
+"But yourself, madam?"
+
+"I am the Lady Betty Modish; at your service."
+
+A four-inch grin went round the table. The dramatical old rascal, Cibber,
+began now to look at it as a bit of genteel comedy; and slipped out his
+note-book under the table. Pomander cursed her ready wit, which had
+disappointed him of his catastrophe. Vane wrote on a slip of paper: "Pity
+and respect the innocent!" and passed it to Mrs. Woffington. He could not
+have done a more superfluous or injudicious thing.
+
+"And now, Ernest," cried Mabel, "for the news from Willoughby."
+
+Vane stopped her in dismay. He felt how many satirical eyes and ears were
+upon him and his wife. "Pray go and change your dress first, Mabel,"
+cried he, fully determined that on her return she should not find the
+present party there.
+
+Mrs. Vane cast an imploring look on Mrs. Woffington. "My things are not
+come," said she. "And, Lady Betty, I had so much to tell him, and to be
+sent away;" and the deep blue eyes began to fill.
+
+Now Mrs. Woffington was determined that this lady, who she saw was
+simple, should disgust her husband by talking twaddle before a band of
+satirists. So she said warmly: "It is not fair on us. Pray, madam, your
+budget of country news. Clouted cream so seldom comes to London quite
+fresh."
+
+"There, you see, Ernest," said the unsuspicious soul. "First, you must
+know that Gray Gillian is turned out for a brood mare, so old George
+won't let me ride her; old servants are such tyrants, my lady. And my
+Barbary hen has laid two eggs; Heaven knows the trouble we had to bring
+her to it. And Dame Best, that is my husband's old nurse, Mrs. Quickly,
+has had soup and pudding from the Hall everyday; and once she went so far
+as to say it wasn't altogether a bad pudding. She is not a very grateful
+woman, in a general way, poor thing! I made it with these hands."
+
+Vane writhed.
+
+"Happy pudding!" observed Mr. Cibber.
+
+"Is this mockery, sir?" cried Vane, with a sudden burst of irritation.
+
+"No, sir; it is gallantry," replied Cibber, with perfect coolness.
+
+"Will you hear a little music in the garden?" said Vane to Mrs.
+Woffington, pooh-poohing his wife's news.
+
+"Not till I hear the end of Dame Bess."
+
+"Best, my lady."
+
+"Dame Best interests _me,_ Mr. Vane."
+
+"Ay, and Ernest is very fond of her, too, when he is at home. She is in
+her nice new cottage, dear; but she misses the draughts that were in her
+old one--they were like old friends. 'The only ones I have, I'm
+thinking,' said the dear cross old thing; and there stood I, on her
+floor, with a flannel petticoat in both hands, that I had made for her,
+and ruined my finger. Look else, my Lord Foppington?" She extended a hand
+the color of cream.
+
+"Permit me, madam?" taking out his glasses, with which he inspected her
+finger; and gravely announced to the company: "The laceration is, in
+fact, discernible. May I be permitted, madam," added he, "to kiss this
+fair hand, which I should never have suspected of having ever made itself
+half so useful?"
+
+"Ay, my lord!" said she, coloring slightly, "you shall, because you are
+so old; but I don't say for a young gentleman, unless it was the one that
+belongs to me; and he does not ask me."
+
+"My dear Mabel; pray remember we are not at Willoughby."
+
+"I see we are not, Ernest." And the dove-like eyes filled brimful; and
+all her innocent prattle was put an end to.
+
+"What brutes men are," thought Mrs. Woffington. "They are not worthy even
+of a fool like this."
+
+Mr. Vane once more pressed her to hear a little music in the garden; and
+this time she consented. Mr. Vane was far from being unmoved by his
+wife's arrival, and her true affection. But she worried him; he was
+anxious, above all things, to escape from his present position, and
+separate the rival queens; and this was the only way he could see to do
+it. He whispered Mabel, and bade her somewhat peremptorily rest herself
+for an hour after her journey, and he entered the garden with Mrs.
+Woffington.
+
+Now the other gentlemen admired Mrs. Vane the most. She was new. She was
+as lovely, in her way, as Peggy; and it was the young May-morn beauty of
+the country. They forgave her simplicity, and even her goodness, on
+account of her beauty; men are not severe judges of beautiful women. They
+all solicited her to come with them, and be the queen of the garden. But
+the good wife was obedient. Her lord had told her she was fatigued; so
+she said she was tired.
+
+"Mr. Vane's garden will lack its sweetest and fairest flower, madam,"
+cried Cibber, "if we leave you here."
+
+"Nay, my lord, there are fairer than I."
+
+"Poor Quin!" cried Kitty Clive; "to have to leave the alderman's walk for
+the garden-walk."
+
+"All I regret," said the honest glutton, stoutly, "is that I go without
+carving for Mrs. Vane."
+
+"You are very good, Sir John; I will be more troublesome to you at
+supper-time."
+
+When they were all gone, she couldn't help sighing. It almost seemed as
+if everybody was kinder to her than he whose kindness alone she valued.
+"And he must take Lady Betty's hand instead of mine," thought she. "But
+that is good breeding, I suppose. I wish there was no such thing; we are
+very happy without it in Shropshire." Then this poor little soul was
+ashamed of herself, and took herself to task. "Poor Ernest," said she,
+pitying the wrongdoer, like a woman, "he was not pleased to be so taken
+by surprise. No wonder; they are so ceremonious in London. How good of
+him not to be angry!" Then she sighed; her heart had received a damp. His
+voice seemed changed, and he did not meet her eyes with the look he wore
+at Willoughby. She looked timidly into the garden. She saw the gay colors
+of beaux, as well as of belles--for in these days broadcloth had not
+displaced silk and velvet--glancing and shining among the trees; and she
+sighed, but, presently brightening up a little, she said: "I will go and
+see that the coffee is hot and clear, and the chocolate well mixed for
+them." The poor child wanted to do something to please her husband.
+Before she could carry out this act of domestic virtue, her attention was
+drawn to a strife of tongues in the hall. She opened the folding-doors,
+and there was a fine gentleman obstructing the entrance of a somber,
+rusty figure, with a portfolio and a manuscript under each arm.
+
+The fine gentleman was Colander. The seedy personage was the eternal
+Triplet, come to make hay with his five-foot rule while the sun shone.
+Colander had opened the door to him, and he had shot into the hall. The
+major-domo obstructed the farther entrance of such a coat.
+
+"I tell you my master is not at home," remonstrated the major-domo.
+
+"How can you say so," cried Mrs. Vane, in surprise, "when you know he is
+in the garden?"
+
+"Simpleton!" thought Colander.
+
+"Show the gentleman in."
+
+"Gentleman!" muttered Colander.
+
+Triplet thanked her for her condescension; he would wait for Mr. Vane in
+the hall. "I came by appointment, madam; this is the only excuse for the
+importunity you have just witnessed."
+
+Hearing this, Mrs. Vane dismissed Colander to inform his master. Colander
+bowed loftily, and walked into the servants' hall without deigning to
+take the last proposition into consideration.
+
+"Come in here, sir," said Mabel; "Mr. Vane will come as soon as he can
+leave his company." Triplet entered in a series of obsequious jerks. "Sit
+down and rest you, sir." And Mrs. Vane seated herself at the table, and
+motioned with her white hand to Triplet to sit beside her.
+
+Triplet bowed, and sat on the edge of a chair, and smirked and dropped
+his portfolio, and instantly begged Mrs. Vane's pardon; in taking it up,
+he let fall his manuscript, and was again confused; but in the middle of
+some superfluous and absurd excuse his eye fell on the haunch; it
+straightway dilated to an enormous size, and he became suddenly silent
+and absorbed in contemplation.
+
+"You look sadly tired, sir."
+
+"Why, yes, madam. It is a long way from Lambeth Walk, and it is passing
+hot, madam." He took his handkerchief out, and was about to wipe his
+brow, but returned it hastily to his pocket. "I beg your pardon, madam,"
+said Triplet, whose ideas of breeding, though speculative, were severe,
+"I forgot myself."
+
+Mabel looked at him, and colored, and slightly hesitated. At last she
+said: "I'll be bound you came in such a hurry you forgot--you mustn't be
+angry with me--to have your dinner first!"
+
+For Triplet looked like an absurd wolf-- all benevolence and starvation!
+
+"What divine intelligence!" thought Trip. "How strange, madam," cried he,
+"you have hit it! This accounts, at once, for a craving I feel. Now you
+remind me, I recollect carving for others, I did forget to remember
+myself. Not that I need have forgot it to-day, madam; but, being used to
+forget it, I did not remember not to forget it to-day, madam, that was
+all." And the author of this intelligent account smiled very, very, very
+absurdly.
+
+She poured him out a glass of wine. He rose and bowed; but peremptorily
+refused it, with his tongue--his eye drank it.
+
+"But you must," persisted this hospitable lady.
+
+"But, madam, consider I am not entitled to-- Nectar, as I am a man!"
+
+The white hand was filling his plate with partridge pie: "But, madam, you
+don't consider how you overwhelm me with your-- Ambrosia, as I am a
+poet!"
+
+"I am sorry Mr. Vane should keep you waiting."
+
+"By no means, madam; it is fortunate--I mean, it procures me the pleasure
+of" (here articulation became obstructed) "your society, madam. Besides,
+the servants of the Muse are used to waiting. What we are not used to is"
+(here the white hand filled his glass) "being waited upon by Hebe and the
+Twelve Graces, whose health I have the honor "--(Deglutition).
+
+"A poet!" cried Mabel; "oh! I am so glad! Little did I think ever to see
+a living poet! Dear heart! I should not have known, if you had not told
+me. Sir, I love poetry!"
+
+"It is in your face, madam." Triplet instantly whipped out his
+manuscript, put a plate on one corner of it, and a decanter on the other,
+and begged her opinion of this trifle, composed, said he, "in honor of a
+lady Mr. Vane entertains to-day."
+
+"Oh!" said Mrs. Vane, and colored with pleasure. How ungrateful she had
+been! Here was an attention!--For, of course, she never doubted that the
+verses were in honor of her arrival.
+
+"'Bright being--'"
+
+sang out Triplet.
+
+"Nay, sir," said Mabel; "I think I know the lady, and it would be hardly
+proper of me--"
+
+"Oh, madam!" said Triplet, solemnly; "strictly correct, madam!" And he
+spread his hand out over his bosom. "Strictly!-- 'Blunderbuss' (my
+poetical name, madam) never stooped to the taste of the town.
+
+'Bright being, thou--'"
+
+"But you must have another glass of wine first, and a slice of the
+haunch."
+
+"With alacrity, madam." He laid in a fresh stock of provisions.
+
+Strange it was to see them side by side! _he,_ a Don Quixote, with
+cordage instead of lines in his mahogany face, and clothes hanging upon
+him; _she,_ smooth, duck-like, delicious, and bright as an opening rose
+fresh with dew!
+
+She watched him kindly, archly and demurely; and still plied him,
+countrywise, with every mortal thing on the table.
+
+But the poet was not a boa-constrictor, and even a boa-constrictor has an
+end. Hunger satisfied, his next strongest feeling, simple vanity,
+remained to be contented. As the last morsel went in out came:
+
+"'Bright being, thou whose ra--'"
+
+"No! no!" said she, who fancied herself (and not without reason) the
+bright being. "Mr. Vane intended them for a surprise."
+
+"As you please, madam;" and the disappointed bore sighed. "But you would
+have liked them, for the theme inspired me. The kindest, the most
+generous of women! Don't you agree with me, madam?"
+
+Mabel Vane opened her eyes. "Hardly, sir," laughed she.
+
+"If you knew her as I do."
+
+"I ought to know her better, sir."
+
+"Ay, indeed! Well, madam, now her kindness to me, for instance--a poor
+devil like me. The expression, I trust, is not disagreeable to you,
+madam? If so, forgive me, and consider it withdrawn."
+
+"La, sir! civility is so cheap, if you go to that."
+
+"Civility, ma'am? Why, she has saved me from despair--from starvation,
+perhaps."
+
+"Poor thing! Well, indeed, sir, you looked--you looked--what a shame! and
+you a poet."
+
+"From an epitaph to an epic, madam."
+
+At this moment a figure looked in upon them from the garden, but
+retreated unobserved. It was Sir Charles Pomander, who had slipped away,
+with the heartless and malicious intention of exposing the husband to the
+wife, and profiting by her indignation and despair. Seeing Triplet, he
+made an extemporaneous calculation that so infernal a chatterbox could
+not be ten minutes in her company without telling her everything, and
+this would serve his turn very well. He therefore postponed his purpose,
+and strolled away to a short distance.
+
+Triplet justified the baronet's opinion. Without any sort of sequency he
+now informed Mrs. Vane that the benevolent lady was to sit to him for her
+portrait.
+
+Here was a new attention of Ernest's. How good he was, and how wicked and
+ungrateful she!
+
+"What! are you a painter too?" she inquired.
+
+"From a house front to an historical composition, madam."
+
+"Oh, what a clever man! And so Ernest commissioned you to paint a
+portrait?"
+
+"No, madam; for that I am indebted to the lady herself."
+
+"The lady herself?"
+
+"Yes, madam; and I expected to find her here. Will you add to your
+kindness by informing me whether she has arrived? Or she is gone--"
+
+"Who, sir? (Oh, dear! not my portrait! Oh, Ernest!)"
+
+"Who, madam!" cried Triplet; "why, Mrs. Woffington!"
+
+"She is not here," said Mrs. Vane, who remembered all the names perfectly
+well. "There is one charming lady among our guests, her face took me in a
+moment; but she is a titled lady. There is no Mrs. Woffington among
+them."
+
+"Strange!" replied Triplet; "she was to be here; and, in fact, that is
+why I expedited these lines in her honor."
+
+"In _her_ honor, sir?"
+
+"Yes, madam. Allow me:
+
+'Brights being, thou whose radiant brow--'"
+
+"No! no! I don't care to hear them now, for I don't know the lady."
+
+"Well, madam, but at least you have seen her act?"
+
+"Act! you don't mean all this is for an actress?"
+
+_"An_ actress? _The_ actress! And you have never seen her act? What a
+pleasure you have to come! To see her act is a privilege; but to act with
+her, as _I_ once did! But she does not remember that, nor shall I remind
+her, madam," said Triplet sternly. "On that occasion I was hissed, owing
+to circumstances which, for the credit of our common nature, I suppress."
+
+"What! are you an actor too? You are everything."
+
+"And it was in a farce of my own, madam, which, by the strangest
+combination of accidents, was damned!"
+
+"A play-writer? Oh, what clever men there are in the world--in London, at
+least! He is a play-writer, too. I wonder my husband comes not. Does Mr.
+Vane--does Mr. Vane admire this actress?" said she, suddenly.
+
+"Mr. Vane, madam, is a gentleman of taste," said he, pompously.
+
+"Well, sir," said the lady, languidly, "she is not here." Triplet took
+the hint and rose. "Good-by," said she, sweetly; and thank you kindly for
+your company,
+
+"Triplet, madam--James Triplet, of 10, Hercules Buildings, Lambeth.
+Occasional verses, odes, epithalamia, elegies, dedications, squibs,
+impromptus and hymns executed with spirit, punctuality and secrecy.
+Portraits painted, and instruction in declamation, sacred, profane and
+dramatic. The card, madam" (and he drew it as doth a theatrical fop his
+rapier) "of him who, to all these qualifications adds a prouder
+still--that of being,
+
+"Madam,
+
+"Your humble, devoted and grateful servant,
+
+JAMES TRIPLET."
+
+He bowed in a line from his right shoulder to his left toe, and moved
+off. But Triplet could not go all at one time out of such company; he was
+given to return in real life, he had played this trick so often on the
+stage. He came back, exuberant with gratitude.
+
+"The fact is, madam," said he, "strange as it may appear to you, a kind
+hand has not so often been held out to me, that I should forget it,
+especially when that hand is so fair and gracious. May I be permitted,
+madam--you will impute it to gratitude rather than audacity--I--I--"
+(whimper), "madam" (with sudden severity), "I am gone!"
+
+These last words he pronounced with the right arm at an angle of
+forty-five degrees, and the fingers pointing horizontally. The stage had
+taught him this grace also. In his day, an actor who had three words to
+say, such as, "My lord's carriage is waiting," came on the stage with the
+right arm thus elevated, delivered his message in the tones of a falling
+dynasty, wheeled like a soldier, and retired with the left arm pointing
+to the sky and the right hand extended behind him like a setter's tail.
+
+Left to herself, Mabel was uneasy. "Ernest is so warm-hearted." This was
+the way she put it even to herself. He admired her acting and wished to
+pay her a compliment. "What if I carried him the verses?" She thought she
+should surely please him by showing she was not the least jealous or
+doubtful of him. The poor child wanted so to win a kind look from her
+husband; but ere she could reach the window Sir Charles Pomander had
+entered it.
+
+Now Sir Charles was naturally welcome to Mrs. Vane; for all she knew of
+him was, that he had helped her on the road to her husband.
+
+_Pomander._ "What, madam! all alone here as in Shropshire?"
+
+_Mabel._ "For the moment, sir."
+
+_Pomander._ "Force of habit. A husband with a wife in Shropshire is so
+like a bachelor."
+
+_Mabel._ "Sir!"
+
+_Pomander._ "And our excellent Ernest is such a favorite!"
+
+_Mabel._ "No wonder, sir!"
+
+_Pomander._ "Few can so pass from the larva state of country squire to
+the butterfly nature of beau."
+
+_Mabel._ "Yes" (sadly), "I find him changed."
+
+_Pomander._ "Changed! Transformed. He is now the prop of the
+'Cocoa-Tree,' the star of Ranelagh, the Lauzun of the green-room."
+
+_Mabel._ "The green-room! Where is that? You mean kindly, sir; but you
+make me unhappy."
+
+_Pomander._ "The green-room, my dear madam, is the bower where houris put
+off their wings, and goddesses become dowdies; where Lady Macbeth weeps
+over her lap-dog, dead from repletion; and Belvidera soothes her broken
+heart with a dozen of oysters. In a word, it is the place where actors
+and actresses become men and women, and act their own parts with skill,
+instead of a poet's clumsily."
+
+_Mabel._ "Actors! actresses! Does Mr. Vane frequent such--"
+
+_Pomander._ "He has earned in six months a reputation many a fine
+gentleman would give his ears for. Not a scandalous journal his initials
+have not figured in; not an actress of reputation gossip has not given
+him for a conquest."
+
+"How dare you say this to me?" cried Mrs. Vane, with a sudden flash of
+indignation, and then the tears streamed over her lovely cheeks; and even
+a Pomander might have forborne to torture her so; but Sir Charles had no
+mercy.
+
+"You would he sure to learn it," said he; "and with malicious additions.
+It is better to hear the truth from a friend."
+
+"A friend? He is no friend to a house who calumniates the husband to the
+wife. Is it the part of a friend to distort dear Ernest's kindliness and
+gayety into ill morals; to pervert his love of poetry and plays into an
+unworthy attachment to actors and--oh!" and the tears would come. But she
+dried them, for now she hated this man; with all the little power of
+hatred she had, she detested him. "Do you suppose I did not know Mrs.
+Woffington was to come to us to-day?" cried she, struggling passionately
+against her own fears and Sir Charles's innuendoes.
+
+"What!" cried he; "you recognized her? You detected the actress of all
+work under the airs of Lady Betty Modish?"
+
+"Lady Betty Modish!" cried Mabel. "That good, beautiful face!"
+
+"Ah!" cried Sir Charles, "I see you did not. Well, Lady Betty was Mrs.
+Woffington!"
+
+"Whom my husband, I know, had invited here to present her with these
+verses, which I shall take him for her;" and her poor little lip
+trembled. "Had the visit been in any other character, as you are so base,
+so cruel as to insinuate (what have I done to you that you kill me so,
+you wicked gentleman?), would he have chosen the day of my arrival?"
+
+"Not if he knew you were coming," was the cool reply.
+
+"And he did know--I wrote to him."
+
+"Indeed!" said Pomander, fairly puzzled.
+
+Mrs. Vane caught sight of her handwriting on the tray, and darted to it,
+and seized her letter, and said, triumphantly:
+
+"My last letter, written upon the road--see!"
+
+Sir Charles took it with surprise, but, turning it in his hand, a cool,
+satirical smile came to his face. He handed it back, and said, coldly:
+
+"Read me the passage, madam, on which you argue."
+
+Poor Mrs. Vane turned the letter in her hand, and her eye became
+instantly glazed; the seal was unbroken! She gave a sharp cry of agony,
+like a wounded deer. She saw Pomander no longer; she was alone with her
+great anguish. "I had but my husband and my God in the world," cried she.
+"My mother is gone. My God, have pity on me! my husband does not love
+me."
+
+The cold villain was startled at the mighty storm his mean hand had
+raised. This creature had not only more feeling, but more passion, than a
+hundred libertines. He muttered some villain's commonplaces; while this
+unhappy young lady raised her hands to heaven, and sobbed in a way very
+terrible to any manly heart.
+
+"He is unworthy you," muttered Pomander. "He has forfeited your love. He
+has left you nothing but revenge. Be comforted. Let me, who have learned
+already to adore you--"
+
+"So," cried she, turning on him in a moment (for, on some points, woman's
+instinct is the lightning of wisdom), "this, sir, was your object? I may
+no longer hold a place in my husband's heart; but I am mistress of his
+house. Leave it, sir! and never return to it while I live."
+
+Sir Charles, again discomfited, bowed reverentially. "Your wish shall
+ever be respected by me, madam! But here they come. Use the right of a
+wife. Conceal yourself in that high chair. See, I turn it; so that they
+cannot see you. At least you will find I have but told you the truth."
+
+"No!" cried Mabel, violently. "I will not spy upon my husband at the
+dictation of his treacherous friend."
+
+Sir Charles vanished. He was no sooner gone than Mrs. Vane crouched,
+trembling, and writhing with jealousy, in the large, high-backed chair.
+She heard her husband and the _soi-disant_ Lady Betty Modish enter.
+During their absence, Mrs. Woffington had doubtless been playing her
+cards with art; for it appeared that a reconciliation was now taking
+place. The lady, however, was still cool and distant. It was poor Mabel's
+fate to hear these words: "You must permit me to go alone, Mr. Vane. I
+insist upon leaving this house alone."
+
+On this, he whispered to her.
+
+She answered: "You are not justified."
+
+"I can explain all," was his reply. "I am ready to renounce credit,
+character, all the world for you."
+
+They passed out of the room before the unhappy listener could recover the
+numbing influence of these deadly words.
+
+But the next moment she started wildly up, and cried as one drowning
+cries vaguely for help: "Ernest! oh, no--no! you cannot use me so!
+Ernest--husband! Oh, mother! mother!"
+
+She rose, and would have made for the door, but nature had been too
+cruelly tried. At the first step she could no longer see anything; and
+the next moment, swooning dead away, she fell back insensible, with her
+head and shoulders resting on the chair.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+MR. VANE was putting Mrs. Woffington into her chair, when he thought he
+heard his name cried. He bade that lady a mournful farewell, and stepped
+back into his own hall. He had no sooner done so than he heard a voice,
+the accent of which alarmed him, though he distinguished no word. He
+hastily crossed the hall and flew into the banquet-room. Coming rapidly
+in at the folding-doors he almost fell over his wife, lying insensible
+half upon the floor and half upon the chair. When he saw her pale and
+motionless, a terrible misgiving seized him; he fell on his knees.
+
+"Mabel, Mabel!" cried he, "my love! my innocent wife! Oh, God! what have
+I done? Perhaps it is the fatigue--perhaps she has fainted."
+
+"No, it is not the fatigue!" screamed a voice near him. It was old James
+Burdock, who, with his white hair streaming and his eye gleaming with
+fire, shook his fist in his master's face-- "no, it is not the fatigue,
+you villain! It is you who have killed her, with your jezebels and
+harlots, you scoundrel!"
+
+"Send the women here, James, for God's sake!" cried Mr. Vane, not even
+noticing the insult he had received from a servant. He stamped furiously,
+and cried for help. The whole household was round her in a moment. They
+carried her to bed.
+
+The remorse-stricken man, his own knees trembling under him, flew, in an
+agony of fear and self-reproach, for a doctor!
+
+_A doctor?_
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+DURING the garden scene, Mr. Vane had begged Mrs. Woffington to let him
+accompany her. She peremptorily refused, and said in the same breath she
+was going to Triplet, in Hercules Buildings, to have her portrait
+finished.
+
+Had Mr. Vane understood the sex, he would not have interpreted her
+refusal to the letter; when there was a postscript, the meaning of which
+was so little enigmatical.
+
+Some three hours after the scene we have described, Mrs. Woffington sat
+in Triplet's apartment; and Triplet, palette in hand, painted away upon
+her portrait.
+
+Mrs. Woffington was in that languid state which comes to women after
+their hearts have received a blow. She felt as if life was ended, and but
+the dregs of existence remained; but at times a flood of bitterness
+rolled over her, and she resigned all hope of perfect happiness in this
+world--all hope of loving and respecting the same creature; and at these
+moments she had but one idea--to use her own power, and bind her lover to
+her by chains never to be broken; and to close her eyes, and glide down
+the precipice of the future.
+
+"I think you are master of this art," said she, very languidly, to
+Triplet, "you paint so rapidly."
+
+"Yes, madam," said Triplet, gloomily; and painted on. "Confound this
+shadow!" added he; and painted on.
+
+His soul, too, was clouded. Mrs. Woffington, yawning in his face, had
+told him she had invited all Mr. Vane's company to come and praise his
+work; and ever since that he had been _morne et silencieux._
+
+"You are fortunate," continued Mrs. Woffington, not caring what she said;
+"it is so difficult to make execution keep pace with conception."
+
+"Yes, ma'am;" and he painted on.
+
+"You are satisfied with it?"
+
+"Anything but, ma'am;" and he painted on.
+
+"Cheerful soul!--then I presume it is like?"
+
+"Not a bit, ma'am;" and he painted on.
+
+Mrs. Woffington stretched.
+
+"You can't yawn, ma'am--you can't yawn."
+
+"Oh, yes, I can. You are such good company;" and she stretched again.
+
+"I was just about to catch the turn of the lip," remonstrated Triplet.
+
+"Well, catch it--it won't run away."
+
+"I'll try, ma'am. A pleasant half-hour it will be for me, when they all
+come here like cits at a shilling ordinary--each for his cut."
+
+"At a sensitive goose!"
+
+"That is as may be, madam. Those critics flay us alive!"
+
+"You should not hold so many doors open to censure."
+
+"No, ma'am. Head a little more that way. I suppose you _can't_ sit quiet,
+ma'am?--then never mind!" (This resignation was intended as a stinging
+reproach.) "Mr. Cibber, with his sneering snuff-box! Mr. Quin, with his
+humorous bludgeon! Mrs. Clive, with her tongue! Mr. Snarl, with his
+abuse! And Mr. Soaper, with his praise!--arsenic in treacle I call it!
+But there, I deserve it all! For look on this picture, and on this!"
+
+"Meaning, I am painted as well as my picture!"
+
+"Oh, no, no, no! But to turn from your face, madam--on which the
+lightning of expression plays, continually--to this stony, detestable,
+dead daub!--I could-- And I will, too! Imposture! dead caricature of life
+and beauty, take that!" and he dashed his palette-knife through the
+canvas. "Libelous lie against nature and Mrs. Woffington, take that!" and
+he stabbed the canvas again; then, with sudden humility: "I beg your
+pardon, ma'am," said he, "for this apparent outrage, which I trust you
+will set down to the excitement attendant upon failure. The fact is, I am
+an incapable ass, and no painter! Others have often hinted as much; but I
+never observed it myself till now!"
+
+"Right through my pet dimple!" said Mrs. Woffington, with perfect
+_nonchalance._ "Well, now I suppose I may yawn, or do what I like?"
+
+"You may, madam," said Triplet, gravely. "I have forfeited what little
+control I had over you, madam."
+
+So they sat opposite each other, in mournful silence. At length the
+actress suddenly rose. She struggled fiercely against her depression, and
+vowed that melancholy should not benumb her spirits and her power.
+
+"He ought to have been here by this time," said she to herself. "Well, I
+will not mope for him. I must do something. Triplet," said she.
+
+"Madam."
+
+"Nothing."
+
+"No, madam."
+
+She sat gently down again, and leaned her head on her hand, and thought.
+She was beautiful as she thought!--her body seemed bristling with mind!
+At last, her thoughtful gravity was illumined by a smile. She had thought
+out something _excogitaverat._
+
+"Triplet, the picture is quite ruined!"
+
+"Yes, madam. And a coach-load of criticism coming!"
+
+"Triplet, we actors and actresses have often bright ideas."
+
+"Yes, ma am."
+
+"When we take other people's!"
+
+"He, he!" went Triplet. "Those are our best, madam!"
+
+"Well, sir, I have got a bright idea."
+
+"You don't say so, ma'am!"
+
+"Don't be a brute, dear!" said the lady gravely.
+
+Triplet stared!
+
+"When I was in France, taking lessons of Dumesnil, one of the actors of
+the Theatre Francais had his portrait painted by a rising artist. The
+others were to come and see it. They determined, beforehand, to mortify
+the painter and the sitter, by abusing the work in good set terms. But
+somehow this got wind, and the patients resolved to be the physicians.
+They put their heads together, and contrived that the living face should
+be in the canvas, surrounded by the accessories; these, of course, were
+painted. Enter the actors, who played their little prearranged farce;
+and, when they had each given the picture a slap, the picture rose and
+laughed in their faces, and discomfited them! By the by, the painter did
+not stop there; he was not content with a short laugh, he laughed at them
+five hundred years!"
+
+"Good gracious, Mrs. Woffington!"
+
+"He painted a picture of the whole thing; and as his work is immortal,
+ours an April snow-flake, he has got tremendously the better of those
+rash little satirists. Well, Trip, what is sauce for the gander is sauce
+for the goose; so give me the sharpest knife in the house."
+
+Triplet gave her a knife, and looked confused, while she cut away the
+face of the picture, and by dint of scraping, cutting, and measuring, got
+her face two parts through the canvas. She then made him take his brush
+and paint all round her face, so that the transition might not be too
+abrupt. Several yards of green baize were also produced. This was to be
+disposed behind the easel, so as to conceal her.
+
+Triplet painted here, and touched and retouched there. While thus
+occupied, he said, in his calm, resigned way: "It won't do, madam. I
+suppose you know that?"
+
+"I know nothing," was the reply: "life is a guess. I don't think we could
+deceive Roxalana and Lucy this way, because their eyes are without
+colored spectacles; but, when people have once begun to see by prejudices
+and judge by jargon what can't be done with them? Who knows? do you? I
+don't; so let us try."
+
+"I beg your pardon, madam; my brush touched your face."
+
+"No offense, sir; I am used to that. And I beg, if you can't tone the
+rest of the picture up to me, that you will instantly tone me down to the
+rest. Let us be in tune, whatever it costs, sir."
+
+"I will avail myself of the privilege, madam, but sparingly. Failure,
+which is certain, madam, will cover us with disgrace."
+
+"Nothing is certain in this life, sir, except that you are a goose. It
+succeeded in France; and England can match all Europe for fools. Besides,
+it will be well done. They say Davy Garrick can turn his eyes into
+bottled gooseberries. Well, Peg Woffington will turn hers into black
+currants. Haven't you done? I wonder they have not come. Make haste!"
+
+"They will know by its beauty I never did it."
+
+"That is a sensible remark, Trip. But I think they will rather argue
+backward; that, as you did it, it cannot be beautiful, and so cannot be
+me. Your reputation will be our shield."
+
+"Well, madam, now you mention it, they are like enough to take that
+ground. They despise all I do; if they did not--"
+
+"You would despise them."
+
+At this moment the pair were startled by the sound of a coach. Triplet
+turned as pale as ashes. Mrs. Woffington had her misgivings; but, not
+choosing to increase the difficulty, she would not let Triplet, whose
+self-possession she doubted, see any sign of emotion in her.
+
+"Lock the door," said she, firmly, "and don't be silly. Now hold up my
+green baize petticoat, and let me be in a half-light. Now put that table
+and those chairs before me, so that they can't come right up to me; and,
+Triplet, don't let them come within six yards, if you can help it. Say it
+is unfinished, and so must be seen from a focus."
+
+"A focus! I don't know what you mean."
+
+"No more do I; no more will they, perhaps; and if they don't they will
+swallow it directly. Unlock the door. Are they coming?"
+
+"They are only at the first stair."
+
+"Mr. Triplet, your face is a book, where one may read strange matters.
+For Heaven's sake, compose yourself. Let all the risk lie in one
+countenance. Look at me, sir. Make your face like the Book of Daniel in a
+Jew's back parlor. Volto Sciolto is your cue."
+
+"Madam, madam, how your tongue goes! I hear them on the stairs. Pray
+don't speak!"
+
+"Do you know what we are going to do?" continued the tormenting Peggy.
+"We are going to weigh goose's feathers! to criticise criticism, Trip--"
+
+"Hush! hush!"
+
+A grampus was heard outside the door, and Triplet opened it. There was
+Quin leading the band.
+
+"Have a care, sir," cried Triplet; "there is a hiatus the third step from
+the door."
+
+"A _gradus ad Parnassum_ a wanting," said Mr. Cibber.
+
+Triplet's heart sank. The hole had been there six months, and he had
+found nothing witty to say about it, and at first sight Mr. Cibber had
+done its business. And on such men he and his portrait were to attempt a
+preposterous delusion. Then there was Snarl, who wrote critiques on
+painting, and guided the national taste. The unlucky exhibitor was in a
+cold sweat. He led the way, like a thief going to the gallows.
+
+"The picture being unfinished, gentlemen," said he, "must, if you would
+do me justice, be seen from a--a focus; must be judged from here, I
+mean."
+
+"Where, sir?" said Mr. Cibber.
+
+"About here, sir, if you please," said poor Triplet faintly.
+
+"It looks like a finished picture from here," said Mrs. Clive.
+
+"Yes, madam," groaned Triplet.
+
+They all took up a position, and Triplet timidly raised his eyes along
+with the rest. He was a little surprised. The actress had flattened her
+face! She had done all that could be done, and more than he had conceived
+possible, in the way of extracting life and the atmosphere of expression
+from her countenance. She was "dead still!"
+
+There was a pause. Triplet fluttered. At last some of them spoke as
+follows:
+
+_Soaper._ "Ah!"
+
+_Quin._ "Ho!"
+
+_Clive._ "Eh!"
+
+_Cibber._ "Humph!"
+
+These interjections are small on paper, but as the good creatures uttered
+them they were eloquent; there was a cheerful variety of dispraise
+skillfully thrown into each of them.
+
+"Well," continued Soaper, with his everlasting smile.
+
+Then the fun began.
+
+"May I be permitted to ask whose portrait this is?" said Mr. Cibber
+slyly.
+
+"I distinctly told you, it was to be Peg Woffington's," said Mrs. Clive.
+"I think you might take my word."
+
+"Do you act as truly as you paint?" said Quin.
+
+"Your fame runs no risk from me, sir!" replied Triplet.
+
+"It is not like Peggy's beauty! Eh?" rejoined Quin.
+
+"I can't agree with you," cried Kitty Clive. "I think it a very pretty
+face; and not at all like Peg Woffington's."
+
+"Compare paint with paint," said Quin. "Are you sure you ever saw down to
+Peggy's real face?"
+
+Triplet had seen with alarm that Mr. Snarl spoke not; many satirical
+expressions crossed his face, but he said nothing. Triplet gathered from
+this that he had at once detected the trick. "Ah!" thought Triplet, "he
+means to quiz them, as well as expose me. He is hanging back; and, in
+point of fact, a mighty satirist like Snarl would naturally choose to
+quiz six people rather than two."
+
+"Now I call it beautiful!" said the traitor Soaper. "So calm and
+reposeful; no particular expression."
+
+"None whatever," said Snarl.
+
+"Gentlemen," said Triplet, "does it never occur to you that the fine arts
+are tender violets, and cannot blow when the north winds--"
+
+"Blow!" inserted Quin.
+
+"Are so cursed cutting?" continued Triplet.
+
+"My good sir, I am never cutting!" smirked Soaper. "My dear Snarl,"
+whined he, "give us the benefit of your practiced judgment. Do justice to
+this ad-mirable work of art," drawled the traitor.
+
+"I will!" said Mr. Snarl; and placed himself before the picture.
+
+"What on earth will he say?" thought Triplet. "I can see by his face he
+has found us out."
+
+Mr. Snarl delivered a short critique. Mr. Snarl's intelligence was not
+confined to his phrases; all critics use intelligent phrases and
+philosophical truths. But this gentleman's manner was very intelligent;
+it was pleasant, quiet, assured, and very convincing. Had the reader or I
+been there, he would have carried us with him, as he did his hearers; and
+as his successors carry the public with them now.
+
+"Your brush is by no means destitute of talent, Mr. Triplet," said Mr.
+Snarl. "But you are somewhat deficient, at present, in the great
+principles of your art; the first of which is a loyal adherence to truth.
+Beauty itself is but one of the forms of truth, and nature is our finite
+exponent of infinite truth."
+
+His auditors gave him a marked attention. They could not but acknowledge
+that men who go to the bottom of things like this should be the best
+instructors.
+
+"Now, in nature, a woman's face at this distance--ay, even at this short
+distance-- melts into the air. There is none of that sharpness; but, on
+the contrary, a softness of outline." He made a lorgnette of his two
+hands; the others did so too, and found they saw much better--oh, ever so
+much better! "Whereas yours," resumed Snarl, "is hard; and, forgive me,
+rather tea-board like. Then your _chiaro scuro,_ my good sir, is very
+defective; for instance, in nature, the nose, intercepting the light on
+one side the face, throws, of necessity, a shadow under the eye.
+Caravaggio, Venetians generally, and the Bolognese masters, do particular
+justice to this. No such shade appears in this portrait."
+
+"'Tis so, stop my vitals!" observed Colley Cibber. And they all looked,
+and, having looked, wagged their heads in assent--as the fat, white lords
+at Christie's waggle fifty pounds more out for a copy of Rembrandt, a
+brown levitical Dutchman, visible in the pitch-dark by some sleight of
+sun Newton had not wit to discover.
+
+Soaper dissented from the mass.
+
+"But, my dear Snarl, if there are no shades, there are lights, loads of
+lights."
+
+"There are," replied Snarl; "only they are impossible, that is all. You
+have, however," concluded he, with a manner slightly supercilious,
+"succeeded in the mechanical parts; the hair and the dress are well, Mr.
+Triplet; but your Woffington is not a woman, not nature."
+
+They all nodded and waggled assent; but this sagacious motion was
+arrested as by an earthquake.
+
+The picture rang out, in the voice of a clarion, an answer that outlived
+the speaker: "She's a woman! for she has taken four men in! She's nature!
+for a fluent dunce doesn't know her when he sees her!"
+
+Imagine the tableau! It was charming! Such opening of eyes and mouths!
+Cibber fell by second nature into an attitude of the old comedy. And all
+were rooted where they stood, with surprise and incipient mortification,
+except Quin, who slapped his knee, and took the trick at its value.
+
+Peg Woffington slipped out of the green baize, and, coming round from the
+back of the late picture, stood in person before them; while they looked
+alternately at her and at the hole in the canvas. She then came at each
+of them in turn, _more dramatico._
+
+"A pretty face, and not like Woffington. I owe you two, Kate Clive."
+
+"Who ever saw Peggy's real face? Look at it now if you can without
+blushing, Mr. Quin."
+
+Quin, a good-humored fellow, took the wisest view of his predicament, and
+burst into a hearty laugh.
+
+"For all this," said Mr. Snarl, peevishly, "I maintain, upon the
+unalterable principles of art--" At this they all burst into a roar, not
+sorry to shift the ridicule. "Goths!" cried Snarl, fiercely.
+"Good-morning, ladies and gentlemen," cried Mr. Snarl, _avec intention,_
+"I have a criticism to write of last night's performance." The laugh died
+away to a quaver. "I shall sit on your pictures one day, Mr. Brush."
+
+"Don't sit on them with your head downward, or you'll addle them," said
+Mr. Brush, fiercely. This was the first time Triplet had ever answered a
+foe. Mrs. Woffington gave him an eloquent glance of encouragement. He
+nodded his head in infantine exultation at what he had done.
+
+"Come, Soaper," said Mr. Snarl.
+
+Mr. Soaper lingered one moment to say: "You shall always have my good
+word, Mr. Triplet."
+
+"I will try -- and not deserve it, Mr. Soaper," was the prompt reply.
+
+"Serve 'em right," said Mr. Cibber, as soon as the door had closed upon
+them; "for a couple of serpents, or rather one boa-constrictor. Soaper
+slavers, for Snarl to crush. But we were all a little too hard on Triplet
+here; and, if he will accept my apology--"
+
+"Why, sir," said Triplet, half trembling, but driven on by looks from
+Mrs. Woffington, "'Cibber's Apology' is found to be a trifle wearisome."
+
+"Confound his impertinence!" cried the astounded laureate. "Come along,
+Jemmy."
+
+"Oh, sir," said Quin, good-humoredly, "we must give a joke and take a
+joke. And when he paints my portrait--which he shall do--"
+
+"The bear from Hockley Hole shall sit for the head!"
+
+"Curse his impudence!" roared Quin. "I'm at your service, Mr. Cibber,"
+added he, in huge dudgeon.
+
+Away went the two old boys.
+
+"Mighty well!" said waspish Mrs. Clive. "I did intend you should have
+painted Mrs. Clive. But after this impertinence--"
+
+"You will continue to do it yourself, ma'am!"
+
+This was Triplet's hour of triumph. His exultation was undignified, and
+such as is said to precede a fall. He inquired gravely of Mrs.
+Woffington, whether he had or had not shown a spirit. Whether he had or
+had not fired into each a parting shot, as they sheered off. To repair
+which, it might be advisable for them to put into friendly ports.
+
+"Tremendous!" was the reply. "And when Snarl and Soaper sit on your next
+play, they won't forget the lesson you have given them."
+
+"I'll be sworn they won't!" chuckled Triplet. But, reconsidering her
+words, he looked blank, and muttered: "Then perhaps it would have been
+more prudent to let them alone!"
+
+"Incalculably more prudent!" was the reply.
+
+"Then why did you set me on, madam?" said Triplet, reproachfully.
+
+"Because I wanted amusement, and my head ached," was the cool answer,
+somewhat languidly given.
+
+"I defy the coxcombs!" cried Triplet, with reviving spirit. "But real
+criticism I respect, honor, and bow to. Such as yours, madam; or such as
+that sweet lady's at Mr. Vane's would have been; or, in fact, anybody's
+who appreciates me. Oh, madam, I wanted to ask you, was it not strange
+your not being at Mr. Vane's, after all, to-day?"
+
+"I was at Mr. Vane's, Triplet."
+
+"You were? Why, I came with my verses, and she said you were not there! I
+will go fetch the verses."
+
+"No, no! Who said I was not there?"
+
+"Did I not tell you? The charming young lady who helped me with her own
+hand to everything on the table. What wine that gentleman possesses!"
+
+"Was it a young lady, Triplet?"
+
+"Not more than two-and-twenty, I should say.
+
+"In a traveling-dress?"
+
+"I could not see her dress, madam, for her beauty--brown hair, blue eyes,
+charming in conversation--"
+
+"Ah! What did she tell you?"
+
+"She told me, madam-- Ahem!"
+
+"Well, what did you tell her? And what did she answer?"
+
+"I told her that I came with verses for you, ordered by Mr. Vane. That he
+admired you. I descanted, madam, on your virtues, which had made him your
+slave."
+
+"Go on," said Mrs. Woffington, encouraging him with a deceitful smile.
+"Tell me all you told her."
+
+"That you were sitting to me for your portrait, the destination of which
+was not doubtful. That I lived at 10, Hercules Buildings."
+
+"You told that lady all this?"
+
+"I give my honor. She was so kind, I opened my heart to her. But tell me
+now, madam," said Triplet, joyously dancing round the Woffington volcano,
+"do you know this charming lady?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I congratulate you, madam. An acquaintance worthy even of you; and there
+are not many such. Who is she, madam?" continued Triplet, lively with
+curiosity.
+
+"Mrs. Vane," was the quiet, grim answer.
+
+"Mrs. Vane? His mother? No--am I mad? His sister! Oh, I see, his--"
+
+"His wife!"
+
+"His wife! Why, then, Mr. Vane's married?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Oh, look there!--Oh, look here now! Well, but, good Heavens! she wasn't
+to know you were there, perhaps?"
+
+"No."
+
+"But then I let the cat out of the bag?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"But, good gracious! there will be some serious mischief!"
+
+"No doubt of it."
+
+"And it is all my fault?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I've played the deuce with their married happiness?"
+
+"Probably."
+
+"And ten to one if you are not incensed against me too?"
+
+Mrs. Woffington replied by looking him in the face, and turning her back
+upon him. She walked hastily to the window, threw it open, and looked out
+of it, leaving poor Triplet to very unpleasant reflections. She was so
+angry with him she dared not trust herself to speak.
+
+"Just my luck," thought he. "I had a patron and a benefactress; I have
+betrayed them both." Suddenly an idea struck him. "Madam," said he,
+timorously, "see what these fine gentlemen are! What business had he,
+with a wife at home, to come and fall in love with you? I do it forever
+in my plays--I am obliged--they would be so dull else; but in _real_ life
+to do it is abominable."
+
+"You forget, sir," replied Mrs. Woffington, without moving, "that I am an
+actress--a plaything for the impertinence of puppies and the treachery of
+hypocrites. Fool! to think there was an honest man in the world, and that
+he had shone on me!"
+
+With these words she turned, and Triplet was shocked to see the change in
+her face. She was pale, and her black, lowering brows were gloomy and
+terrible. She walked like a tigress to and fro, and Triplet dared not
+speak to her. Indeed she seemed but half conscious of his presence. He
+went for nobody with her. How little we know the people we eat and go to
+church and flirt with! Triplet had imagined this creature an incarnation
+of gayety, a sportive being, the daughter of smiles, the bride of mirth;
+needed but a look at her now to see that her heart was a volcano, her
+bosom a boiling gulf of fiery lava. She walked like some wild creature;
+she flung her hands up to heaven with a passionate despair, before which
+the feeble spirit of her companion shrank and cowered; and, with
+quivering lips and blazing eyes, she burst into a torrent of passionate
+bitterness.
+
+"But who is Margaret Woffington," she cried, "that she should pretend to
+honest love, or feel insulted by the proffer of a stolen regard? And what
+have we to do with homes, or hearts, or firesides? Have we not the
+playhouse, its paste diamonds, its paste feelings, and the loud applause
+of fops and sots--hearts?--beneath loads of tinsel and paint? Nonsense!
+The love that can go with souls to heaven--such love for us? Nonsense!
+These men applaud us, cajole us, swear to us, flatter us; and yet,
+forsooth, we would have them respect us too."
+
+"My dear benefactress," said Triplet, "they are not worthy of you."
+
+"I thought this man was not all dross; from the first I never felt his
+passion an insult. Oh, Triplet! I could have loved this man--really loved
+him! and I longed so to be good. Oh, God! oh, God!"
+
+"Thank Heaven, you don't love him!" cried Triplet, hastily. "Thank Heaven
+for that!"
+
+"Love him? Love a man who comes to me with a silly second-hand affection
+from his insipid baby-face, and offers me half, or two-thirds, or a third
+of his worthless heart? I hate him! and her! and all the world!"
+
+"That is what I call a very proper feeling," said poor Triplet, with a
+weak attempt to soothe her. "Then break with him at once, and all will be
+well."
+
+"Break with him? Are you mad? No! Since he plays with the tools of my
+trade I shall fool him worse than he has me. I will feed his passion
+full, tempt him, torture him, play with him, as the angler plays a fish
+upon his hook. And, when his very life depends on me, then by degrees he
+shall see me cool, and cool, and freeze into bitter aversion. Then he
+shall rue the hour he fought with the Devil against my soul, and played
+false with a brain and heart like mine!"
+
+"But his poor wife? You will have pity on her?"
+
+"His wife! Are wives' hearts the only hearts that throb, and burn, and
+break? His wife must defend herself. It is not from me that mercy can
+come to her, nor from her to me. I loathe her, and I shall not forget
+that you took her part. Only, if you are her friend, take my advice,
+don't you assist her. I shall defeat her without that. Let her fight
+_her_ battle, and _I_ mine.
+
+"Ah, madam! she cannot fight; she is a dove."
+
+"You are a fool! What do you know about women? You were with her five
+minutes, and she turned you inside out. My life on it, while I have been
+fooling my time here, she is in the field, with all the arts of our sex,
+simplicity at the head of them."
+
+Triplet was making a futile endeavor to convert her to his view of her
+rival, when a knock suddenly came to his door. A slovenly girl, one of
+his own neighbors, brought him a bit of paper, with a line written in
+pencil.
+
+"'Tis from a lady, who waits below," said the girl.
+
+Mrs. Woffington went again to the window, and there she saw getting out
+of a coach, and attended by James Burdock, Mabel Vane, who had sent up
+her name on the back of an old letter.
+
+"What shall I do?" said Triplet, as soon as he recovered the first
+stunning effects of this _contretemps._ To his astonishment, Mrs.
+Woffington bade the girl show the lady upstairs. The girl went down on
+this errand.
+
+"But _you_ are here," remonstrated Triplet. "Oh, to be sure, you can go
+into the other room. There is plenty of time to avoid her," said Triplet,
+in a very natural tremor. "This way, madam!"
+
+Mrs. Woffington stood in the middle of the room like a statue.
+
+"What does she come here for?" said she, sternly. "You have not told me
+all."
+
+"I don't know," cried poor Triplet, in dismay; "and I think the Devil
+brings her here to confound me. For Heaven's sake, retire! What will
+become of us all? There will be murder, I know there will!"
+
+To his horror, Mrs. Woffington would not move. "You are on her side,"
+said she slowly, with a concentration of spite and suspicion. She looked
+frightful at this moment. "All the better for me," added she, with a
+world of female malignity.
+
+Triplet could not make head against this blow; he gasped, and pointed
+piteously to the inner door. "No; I will know two things: the course she
+means to take, and the terms you two are upon."
+
+By this time Mrs. Vane's light foot was heard on the stair, and Triplet
+sank into a chair. "They will tear one another to pieces," said he.
+
+A tap came to the door.
+
+He looked fearfully round for the woman whom jealousy had so speedily
+turned from an angel to a fiend; and saw with dismay that she had
+actually had the hardihood to slip round and enter the picture again. She
+had not quite arranged herself when her rival knocked.
+
+Triplet dragged himself to the door. Before he opened it, he looked
+fearfully over his shoulder, and received a glance of cool, bitter,
+deadly hostility, that boded ill both for him and his visitor. Triplet's
+apprehensions were not unreasonable. His benefactress and this sweet lady
+were rivals!
+
+Jealousy is a dreadful passion, it makes us tigers. The jealous always
+thirst for blood. At any moment when reason is a little weaker than
+usual, they are ready to kill the thing they hate, or the thing they
+love.
+
+Any open collision between these ladies would scatter ill consequences
+all round. Under such circumstances, we are pretty sure to say or do
+something wicked, silly, or unreasonable. But what tortured Triplet more
+than anything was his own particular notion that fate doomed him to
+witness a formal encounter between these two women, and of course an
+encounter of such a nature as we in our day illustrate by "Kilkenny
+cats."
+
+To be sure Mrs. Vane had appeared a dove, but doves can peck on certain
+occasions, and no doubt she had a spirit at bottom. Her coming to him
+proved it. And had not the other been a dove all the morning and
+afternoon? Yet, jealousy had turned her to a fiend before his eyes. Then
+if (which was not probable) no collision took place, what a situation was
+his! Mrs. Woffington (his buckler from starvation) suspected him, and
+would distort every word that came from Mrs. Vane's lips.
+
+Triplet's situation was, in fact, that of AEneas in the storm.
+
+"Olim et haec meminisse juvabit--" "But, while present, such things don't
+please any one a bit."
+
+It was the sort of situation we can laugh at, and see the fun of it six
+months after, if not shipwrecked on it at the time.
+
+With a ghastly smile the poor quaking hypocrite welcomed Mrs. Vane, and
+professed a world of innocent delight that she had so honored his humble
+roof.
+
+She interrupted his compliments, and begged him to see whether she was
+followed by a gentleman in a cloak.
+
+Triplet looked out of the window.
+
+"Sir Charles Pomander!" gasped he.
+
+Sir Charles was at the very door. If, however, he had intended to mount
+the stairs he changed his mind, for he suddenly went off round the corner
+with a businesslike air, real or fictitious.
+
+"He is gone, madam," said Triplet.
+
+Mrs. Vane, the better to escape detection or observation, wore a thick
+mantle and a hood that concealed her features. Of these Triplet
+debarrassed her.
+
+"Sit down, madam;" and he hastily drew a chair so that her back was to
+the picture.
+
+She was pale, and trembled a little. She hid her face in her hands a
+moment, then, recovering her courage, "she begged Mr. Triplet to pardon
+her for coming to him. He had inspired her with confidence," she said;
+"he had offered her his services, and so she had come to him, for she had
+no other friend to aid her in her sore distress." She might have added,
+that with the tact of her sex she had read Triplet to the bottom, and
+came to him, as she would to a benevolent, muscular old woman.
+
+Triplet's natural impulse was to repeat most warmly his offers of
+service. He did so; and then, conscious of the picture, had a misgiving.
+
+"Dear Mr. Triplet," began Mrs. Vane, "you know this person, Mrs.
+Woffington?"
+
+"Yes, madam," replied Triplet, lowering his eyes, "I am honored by her
+acquaintance."
+
+"You will take me to the theater where she acts?"
+
+"Yes, madam; to the boxes, I presume?"
+
+"No! oh, no! How could I bear that? To the place where the actors and
+actresses are."
+
+Triplet demurred. This would be courting that very collision, the dread
+of which even now oppressed him.
+
+At the first faint sign of resistance she began to supplicate him, as if
+he was some great, stern tyrant.
+
+"Oh, you must not, you cannot refuse me. You do not know what I risk to
+obtain this. I have risen from my bed to come to you. I have a fire
+here!" She pressed her hand to her brow. "Oh, take me to her!"
+
+"Madam, I will do anything for you. But be advised; trust to my knowledge
+of human nature. What you require is madness. Gracious Heavens! you two
+are rivals, and when rivals meet there's murder or deadly mischief."
+
+"Ah! if you knew my sorrow, you would not thwart me. Oh, Mr. Triplet!
+little did I think you were as cruel as the rest." So then this cruel
+monster whimpered out that he should do any folly she insisted upon.
+"Good, kind Mr. Triplet!" said Mrs. Vane. "Let me look in your face? Yes,
+I see you are honest and true. I will tell you all." Then she poured in
+his ear her simple tale, unadorned and touching as Judah's speech to
+Joseph. She told him how she loved her husband; how he had loved her; how
+happy they were for the first six months; how her heart sank when he left
+her; how he had promised she should join him, and on that hope she lived.
+"But for two months he had ceased to speak of this, and I grew heart-sick
+waiting for the summons that never came. At last I felt I should die if I
+did not see him; so I plucked up courage and wrote that I must come to
+him. He did not forbid me, so I left our country home. Oh, sir! I cannot
+make you know how my heart burned to be by his side. I counted the hours
+of the journey; I counted the miles. At last I reached his house; I found
+a gay company there. I was a little sorry, but I said: 'His friends shall
+be welcome, right welcome. He has asked them to welcome his wife.'"
+
+"Poor thing!" muttered Triplet.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Triplet! they were there to do honor to ----, and the wife was
+neither expected nor desired. There lay my letters with their seals
+unbroken. I know all _his_ letters by heart, Mr. Triplet. The seals
+unbroken--unbroken! Mr. Triplet."
+
+"It is abominable!" cried Triplet fiercely. "And she who sat in my
+seat--in his house, and in his heart--was this lady, the actress you so
+praised to me?"
+
+"That lady, ma'am," said Triplet, "has been deceived as well as you."
+
+"I am convinced of it," said Mabel.
+
+"And it is my painful duty to tell you, madam, that, with all her talents
+and sweetness, she has a fiery temper; yes, a very fiery temper,"
+continued Triplet, stoutly, though with an uneasy glance in a certain
+direction; "and I have reason to believe she is angry, and thinks more of
+her own ill-usage than yours. Don't you go near her. Trust to my
+knowledge of the sex, madam; I am a dramatic writer. Did you ever read
+the 'Rival Queens'?"
+
+"No."
+
+"I thought not. Well, madam, one stabs the other, and the one that is
+stabbed says things to the other that are more biting than steel. The
+prudent course for you is to keep apart, and be always cheerful, and
+welcome him with a smile--and--have you read 'The Way to keep him'?"
+
+"No, Mr. Triplet," said Mabel, firmly, "I cannot feign. Were I to attempt
+talent and deceit, I should be weaker than I am now. Honesty and right
+are all my strength. I will cry to her for justice and mercy. And if I
+cry in vain, I shall die, Mr. Triplet, that is all."
+
+"Don't cry, dear lady," said Triplet, in a broken voice.
+
+"It is impossible!" cried she, suddenly. "I am not learned, but I can
+read faces. I always could, and so could my Aunt Deborah before me. I
+read you right, Mr. Triplet, and I have read her too. Did not my heart
+warm to her among them all? There is a heart at the bottom of all her
+acting, and that heart is good and noble."
+
+"She is, madam! she is! and charitable too. I know a family she saved
+from starvation and despair. Oh, yes! she has a heart--to feel for the
+_poor,_ at all events."
+
+"And am I not the poorest of the poor?" cried Mrs. Vane. "I have no
+father nor mother, Mr. Triplet; my husband is all I have in the
+world--all I _had,_ I mean."
+
+Triplet, deeply affected himself, stole a look at Mrs. Woffington. She
+was pale; but her face was composed into a sort of dogged obstinacy. He
+was disgusted with her. "Madam," said he, sternly, "there is a wild beast
+more cruel and savage than wolves and bears; it is called 'a rival,' and
+don't you get in its way."
+
+At this moment, in spite of Triplet's precaution, Mrs. Vane, casting her
+eye accidentally round, caught sight of the picture, and instantly
+started up, crying, "She is there!" Triplet was thunderstruck. "What
+likeness!" cried she, and moved toward the supposed picture.
+
+"Don't go to it!" cried Triplet, aghast; "the color is wet."
+
+She stopped; but her eye and her very soul dwelt upon the supposed
+picture; and Triplet stood quaking. "How like! It seems to breathe. You
+are a great painter, sir. A glass is not truer."
+
+Triplet, hardly knowing what he said, muttered something about "critics
+and lights and shades."
+
+"Then they are blind!" cried Mabel, never for a moment removing her eye
+from the object. "Tell me not of lights and shades. The pictures I see
+have a look of paint; but yours looks like life. Oh, that she were here,
+as this _wonderful_ image of hers is. I would speak to her. I am not wise
+or learned; but orators never pleaded as I would plead to her for my
+Ernest's heart." Still her eye glanced upon the picture; and I suppose
+her heart realized an actual presence, though her judgment did not; for
+by some irresistible impulse she sank slowly down and stretched her
+clasped hands toward it, while sobs and words seemed to break direct from
+her bursting heart. "Oh, yes! you are beautiful, you are gifted, and the
+eyes of thousands wait upon your very word and look. What wonder that he,
+ardent, refined, and genial, should lay his heart at your feet? And I
+have nothing but my love to make him love me. I cannot take him from you.
+Oh, be generous to the weak! Oh, give him back to me! What is one heart
+more to you? You are so rich, and I am so poor, that without his love I
+have nothing, and can do nothing but sit me down and cry till my heart
+breaks. Give him back to me, beautiful, terrible woman! for, with all
+your gifts, you cannot love him as his poor Mabel does; and I will love
+you longer perhaps than men can love. I will kiss your feet, and Heaven
+above will bless you; and I will bless you and pray for you to my dying
+day. Ah! it is alive! I am frightened! I am frightened!" She ran to
+Triplet and seized his arm. "No!" cried she, quivering close to him; "I'm
+not frightened, for it was for me she-- Oh, Mrs. Woffington!" and, hiding
+her face on Mr. Triplet's shoulder, she blushed, and wept, and trembled.
+
+What was it had betrayed Mrs. Woffington? _A tear!_
+
+During the whole of this interview (which had taken a turn so unlooked
+for by the listener) she might have said with Beatrice, "What fire is in
+mine ears?" and what self-reproach and chill misgiving in her heart too.
+She had passed through a hundred emotions, as the young innocent wife
+told her sad and simple story. But, anxious now above all things to
+escape without being recognized--for she had long repented having
+listened at all, or placed herself in her present position-- she fiercely
+mastered her countenance; but, though she ruled her features, she could
+not rule her heart. And when the young wife, instead of inveighing
+against her, came to her as a supplicant, with faith in her goodness, and
+sobbed to her for pity, a big tear rolled down her cheek, and proved her
+something more than a picture or an actress.
+
+Mrs. Vane, as we have related, screamed and ran to Triplet.
+
+Mrs. Woffington came instantly from her frame, and stood before them in a
+despairing attitude, with one hand upon her brow. For a single moment her
+impulse was to fly from the apartment, so ashamed was she of having
+listened, and of meeting her rival in this way; but she conquered this
+feeling, and, as soon as she saw Mrs. Vane too had recovered some
+composure, she said to Triplet, in a low but firm voice:
+
+"Leave us, sir. No living creature must hear what I say to this lady!"
+
+Triplet remonstrated, but Mrs. Vane said, faintly:
+
+"Oh, yes, good Mr. Triplet, I would rather you left me."
+
+Triplet, full of misgivings, was obliged to retire.
+
+"Be composed, ladies," said he piteously. "Neither of you could help it;"
+and so he entered his inner room, where he sat and listened nervously,
+for he could not shake off all apprehension of a personal encounter.
+
+In the room he had left there was a long, uneasy silence. Both ladies
+were greatly embarrassed. It was the actress who spoke first. All trace
+of emotion, except a certain pallor, was driven from her face. She spoke
+with very marked courtesy, but in tones that seemed to freeze as they
+dropped one by one from her mouth.
+
+"I trust, madam, you will do me the justice to believe I did not know Mr.
+Vane was married?"
+
+"I am sure of it!" said Mabel, warmly. "I feel you are as good as you are
+gifted."
+
+"Mrs. Vane, I am not!" said the other, almost sternly. "You are
+deceived!"
+
+"Then Heaven have mercy on me! No! I am not deceived, you pitied me. You
+speak coldly now; but I know your face and your heart--you pity me!"
+
+"I do respect, admire, and pity you," said Mrs. Woffington, sadly; "and I
+could consent nevermore to communicate with your--with Mr. Vane."
+
+"Ah!" cried Mabel; "Heaven will bless you! But will you give me back his
+heart?"
+
+"How can I do that?" said Mrs. Woffington, uneasily; she had not
+bargained for this.
+
+"The magnet can repel as well as attract. Can you not break your own
+spell? What will his presence be to me, if his heart remain behind?"
+
+"You ask much of me."
+
+"Alas! I do."
+
+"But I could do even this." She paused for breath. "And perhaps if you,
+who have not only touched my heart, but won my respect, were to say to
+me, 'Do so,' I should do it." Again she paused, and spoke with
+difficulty; for the bitter struggle took away her breath. "Mr. Vane
+thinks better of me than I deserve. I have--only--to make him believe
+me--worthless--worse than I am--and he will drop me like an adder--and
+love you better, far better--for having known--admired--and despised
+Margaret Woffington."
+
+"Oh!" cried Mabel, "I shall bless you every hour of my life." Her
+countenance brightened into rapture at the picture, and Mrs. Woffington's
+darkened with bitterness as she watched her.
+
+But Mabel reflected. "Rob you of your good name?" said this pure
+creature. "Ah, Mabel Vane! you think but of yourself."
+
+"I thank you, madam," said Mrs. Woffington, a little touched by this
+unexpected trait; "but some one must suffer here, and--"
+
+Mabel Vane interrupted her. "This would be cruel and base," said she
+firmly. "No woman's forehead shall be soiled by me. Oh, madam! beauty is
+admired, talent is adored; but virtue is a woman's crown. With it, the
+poor are rich; without it, the rich are poor. It walks through life
+upright, and never hides its head for high or low."
+
+Her face was as the face of an angel now; and the actress, conquered by
+her beauty and her goodness, actually bowed her head and gently kissed
+the hand of the country wife whom she had quizzed a few hours ago.
+
+Frailty paid this homage to virtue!
+
+Mabel Vane hardly noticed it; her eye was lifted to heaven, and her heart
+was gone there for help in a sore struggle.
+
+"This would be to assassinate you; no less. And so, madam," she sighed,
+"with God's help, I do refuse your offer; choosing rather, if needs be,
+to live desolate, but innocent--many a better than I hath lived so--ay!
+if God wills it, to die, with my hopes and my heart crushed, but my hands
+unstained; for so my humble life has passed."
+
+How beautiful, great, and pure goodness is! It paints heaven on the face
+that has it; it wakens the sleeping souls that meet it.
+
+At the bottom of Margaret Woffington's heart lay a soul, unknown to the
+world, scarce known to herself--a heavenly harp, on which ill airs of
+passion had been played--but still it was there, in tune with all that is
+true, pure, really great and good. And now the flush that a great heart
+sends to the brow, to herald great actions, came to her cheek and brow.
+
+"Humble!" she cried. "Such as you are the diamonds of our race. You angel
+of truth and goodness, you have conquered!"
+
+"Oh, yes! yes! Thank God, yes!"
+
+"What a fiend I must be could I injure you! The poor heart we have both
+overrated shall be yours again, and yours for ever. In my hands it is
+painted glass; in the luster of a love like yours it may become a
+priceless jewel." She turned her head away and pondered a moment, then
+suddenly offered to Mrs. Vane her hand with nobleness and majesty; "Can
+you trust me?" The actress too was divinely beautiful now, for her good
+angel shone through her.
+
+"I could trust you with my life!" was the reply.
+
+ "Ah! if I might call you friend, dear lady, what would I not
+do--suffer--resign--to be worthy that title!"
+
+"No, not friend!" cried the warm, innocent Mabel; "sister! I will call
+you sister. I have no sister."
+
+ "Sister!" said Mrs. Woffington. "Oh, do not mock me! Alas! you do not
+know what you say. That sacred name to me, from lips so pure as yours.
+Mrs. Vane," said she, timidly, "would you think me presumptuous if I
+begged you to--to let me kiss you?"
+
+ The words were scarce spoken before Mrs. Vane's arms were wreathed round
+her neck, and that innocent cheek laid sweetly to hers.
+
+Mrs. Woffington strained her to her bosom, and two great hearts, whose
+grandeur the world, worshiper of charlatans, never discovered, had found
+each other out and beat against each other. A great heart is as quick to
+find another out as the world is slow.
+
+Mrs. Woffington burst into a passion of tears and clasped Mabel tighter
+and tighter in a half-despairing way. Mabel mistook the cause, but she
+kissed her tears away.
+
+"Dear sister," said she, "be comforted. I love you. My heart warmed to
+you the first moment I saw you. A woman's love and gratitude are
+something. Ah! you will never find me change. This is for life, look
+you."
+
+"God grant it!" cried the other poor woman. "Oh, it is not that, it is
+not that; it is because I am so little worthy of this. It is a sin to
+deceive you. I am not good like you. You do not know me!"
+
+"You do not know yourself if you say so!" cried Mabel; and to her hearer
+the words seemed to come from heaven. "I read faces," said Mabel. "I read
+yours at sight, and you are what I set you down; and nobody must breathe
+a word against you, not even yourself. Do you think I am blind? You are
+beautiful, you are good, you are my sister, and I love you!"
+
+"Heaven forgive me!" thought the other. "How can I resign this angel's
+good opinion? Surely Heaven sends this blessed dew to my parched heart!"
+And now she burned to make good her promise and earn this virtuous wife's
+love. She folded her once more in her arms, and then, taking her by the
+hand, led her tenderly into Triplet's inner room. She made her lie down
+on the bed, and placed pillows high for her like a mother, and leaned
+over her as she lay, and pressed her lips gently to her forehead. Her
+fertile brain had already digested a plan, but she had resolved that this
+pure and candid soul should take no lessons of deceit. "Lie there," said
+she, "till I open the door: then join us. Do you know what I am going to
+do? I am not going to restore you your husband's heart, but to show you
+it never really left you. You read faces; well, I read circumstances.
+Matters are not as you thought," said she, with all a woman's tact. "I
+cannot explain, but you will see." She then gave Mrs. Triplet peremptory
+orders not to let her charge rise from the bed until the preconcerted
+signal.
+
+Mrs. Vane was, in fact, so exhausted by all she had gone through that she
+was in no condition to resist. She cast a look of childlike confidence
+upon her rival, and then closed her eyes, and tried not to tremble all
+over and listen like a frightened hare.
+
+-----
+
+It is one great characteristic of genius to do great things with little
+things. Paxton could see that so small a matter as a greenhouse could be
+dilated into a crystal palace, and with two common materials--glass and
+iron--he raised the palace of the genii; the brightest idea and the
+noblest ornament added to Europe in this century--the koh-i-noor of the
+west. Livy's definition of Archimedes goes on the same ground.
+
+-----
+
+Peg Woffington was a genius in her way. On entering Triplet's studio her
+eye fell upon three trifles--Mrs. Vane's hood and mantle, the back of an
+old letter, and Mr. Triplet. (It will be seen how she worked these slight
+materials.) On the letter was written in pencil simply these two words,
+"Mabel Vane." Mrs. Woffington wrote above these words two more, "Alone
+and unprotected." She put this into Mr. Triplet's hand, and bade him take
+it down stairs and give it Sir Charles Pomander, whose retreat, she knew,
+must have been fictitious. "You will find him round the corner," said
+she, "or in some shop that looks this way." While uttering these words
+she had put on Mrs. Vane's hood and mantle.
+
+No answer was returned, and no Triplet went out of the door.
+
+She turned, and there he was kneeling on both knees close under her.
+
+"Bid me jump out of that window, madam; bid me kill those two gentlemen,
+and I will not rebel. You are a great lady, a talented lady; you have
+been insulted, and no doubt blood will flow. It ought--it is your due;
+but that innocent lady, do not compromise her!"
+
+"Oh, Mr. Triplet, you need not kneel to me. I do not wish to force you to
+render me a service. I have no right to dictate to you."
+
+"Oh, dear!" cried Triplet, "don't talk in that way. I owe you my life,
+but I think of your own peace of mind, for you are not one to be happy if
+you injure the innocent!" He rose suddenly, and cried: "Madam, promise me
+not to stir till I come back!"
+
+"Where are you going?"
+
+"To bring the husband to his wife's feet, and so save one angel from
+despair, and another angel from a great crime."
+
+"Well, I suppose you are wiser than I," said she. "But, if you are in
+earnest, you had better be quick, for somehow I am rather changeable
+about these people."
+
+"You can't help that, madam, it is your sex; you are an angel. May I be
+permitted to kiss your hand? you are all goodness and gentleness at
+bottom. I fly to Mr. Vane, and we will be back before you have time to
+repent, and give the Devil the upper hand again, my dear, good, sweet
+lady!"
+
+Away flew Triplet, all unconscious that he was not Mrs. Woffington's
+opponent, but puppet. He ran, he tore, animated by a good action, and
+spurred by the notion that he was in direct competition with the fiend
+for the possession of his benefactress. He had no sooner turned the
+corner than Mrs. Woffington, looking out of the window, observed Sir
+Charles Pomander on the watch, as she had expected. She remained at the
+window with Mrs. Vane's hood on, until Sir Charles's eye in its
+wanderings lighted on her, and then, dropping Mrs. Vane's letter from the
+window, she hastily withdrew.
+
+Sir Charles eagerly picked it up. His eye brightened when he read the
+short contents. With a self-satisfied smile he mounted the stair. He
+found in Triplet's house a lady who seemed startled at her late
+hardihood. She sat with her back to the door, her hood drawn tightly
+down, and wore an air of trembling consciousness. Sir Charles smiled
+again. He knew the sex, at least he said so. (It is an assertion often
+ventured upon.) Accordingly Sir Charles determined to come down from his
+height, and court nature and innocence in their own tones. This he
+rightly judged must be the proper course to take with Mrs. Vane. He fell
+down with mock ardor upon one knee.
+
+The supposed Mrs. Vane gave a little squeak.
+
+"Dear Mrs. Vane," cried he, "be not alarmed; loveliness neglected, and
+simplicity deceived, insure respect as well as adoration. Ah!" (A sigh.)
+
+"Oh, get up, sir; do, please. Ah!" (A sigh.)
+
+"You sigh, sweetest of human creatures. Ah! why did not a nature like
+yours fall into hands that would have cherished it as it deserves? Had
+Heaven bestowed on me this hand, which I take--"
+
+"Oh, please, sir--"
+
+"With the profoundest respect, would I have abandoned such a treasure for
+an actress?--a Woffington! as artificial and hollow a jade as ever winked
+at a side box!"
+
+"Is she, sir?"
+
+"Notorious, madam. Your husband is the only man in London who does not
+see through her. How different are you! Even I, who have no taste for
+actresses, found myself revived, refreshed, ameliorated by that engaging
+picture of innocence and virtue you drew this morning; yourself the
+bright and central figure. Ah, dear angel! I remember all your favorites,
+and envy them their place in your recollections. Your Barbary mare--"
+
+"Hen, sir!
+
+"Of course I meant hen; and Gray Gillian, his old nurse--"
+
+"No, no, no! she is the mare, sir. He! he! he!"
+
+"So she is. And Dame--Dame--"
+
+"Best!"
+
+"Ah! I knew it. You see how I remember them all. And all carry me back to
+those innocent days which fleet too soon--days when an angel like you
+might have weaned me from the wicked pleasures of the town, to the placid
+delights of a rural existence!"
+
+"Alas, sir!"
+
+"You sigh. It is not yet too late. I am a convert to you; I swear it on
+this white hand. Ah! how can I relinquish it, pretty fluttering
+prisoner?"
+
+"Oh, please--"
+
+"Stay a while."
+
+"No! please, sir--"
+
+"While I fetter thee with a worthy manacle." Sir Charles slipped a
+diamond ring of great value upon his pretty prisoner.
+
+"La, sir, how pretty!" cried innocence.
+
+Sir Charles then undertook to prove that the luster of the ring was
+faint, compared with that of the present wearer's eyes. This did not suit
+innocence; she hung her head and fluttered, and showed a bashful
+repugnance to look her admirer in the face. Sir Charles playfully
+insisted, and Mrs. Woffington was beginning to be a little at a loss,
+when suddenly voices were heard upon the stairs.
+
+_"My husband!"_ cried the false Mrs. Vane, and in a moment she rose and
+darted into Triplet's inner apartment.
+
+Mr. Vane and Mr. Triplet were talking earnestly as they came up the
+stair. It seems the wise Triplet had prepared a little dramatic scene for
+his own refreshment, as well as for the ultimate benefit of all parties.
+He had persuaded Mr. Vane to accompany him by warm, mysterious promises
+of a happy _denouement;_ and now, having conducted that gentleman as far
+as his door, he was heard to say:
+
+"And now, sir, you shall see one who waits to forget grief,
+suspicion--all, in your arms. Behold!" and here he flung the door open.
+
+"The devil!"
+
+"You flatter me!" said Pomander, who had had time to recover his
+_aplomb,_ somewhat shaken, at first, by Mr. Vane's inopportune arrival.
+
+Now it is to be observed that Mr. Vane had not long ago seen his wife
+lying on her bed, to all appearance incapable of motion.
+
+Mr. Vane, before Triplet could recover his surprise, inquired of Pomander
+why he had sent for him. "And what," added he, "is the grief, suspicion,
+I am, according to Mr. Triplet, to forget in your arms?"
+
+Mr. Vane added this last sentence in rather a testy manner.
+
+"Why, the fact is--" began Sir Charles, without the remotest idea of what
+the fact was going to be.
+
+"That Sir Charles Pomander--" interrupted Triplet.
+
+"But Mr. Triplet is going to explain," said Sir Charles, keenly.
+
+"Nay, sir; be yours the pleasing duty. But, now I think of it," resumed
+Triplet, "why not tell the simple truth? it is not a play! She I brought
+you here to see was not Sir Charles Pomander; but--"
+
+"I forbid you to complete the name!" cried Pomander.
+
+"I command you to complete the name!" cried Vane.
+
+"Gentlemen, gentlemen! how can I do both?" remonstrated Triplet.
+
+"Enough, sir!" cried Pomander. "It is a lady's secret. I am the guardian
+of that lady's honor."
+
+"She has chosen a strange guardian of her honor!" said Vane bitterly.
+
+Gentlemen!" cried poor Triplet, who did not at all like the turn things
+were taking, "I give you my word, she does not even know of Sir Charies's
+presence here!"
+
+"Who?" cried Vane, furiously. "Man alive! who are you speaking of?"
+
+"Mrs. Vane
+
+"My wife!" cried Vane, trembling with anger and jealousy. "She here! and
+with this man?"
+
+"No!" cried Triplet. "With me, with me! Not with him, of course."
+
+"Boaster!" cried Vane, contemptuously. "But that is a part of your
+profession!"
+
+Pomander, irritated, scornfully drew from his pocket the ladies' joint
+production, which had fallen at his feet from Mrs. Woffington's hand. He
+presented this to Mr. Vane, who took it very uneasily; a mist swam before
+his eyes as he read the words: "Alone and unprotected--Mabel Vane." He
+had no sooner read these words, than he found he loved his wife; when he
+tampered with his treasure, he did not calculate on another seeking it.
+
+This was Pomander's hour of triumph! He proceeded coolly to explain to
+Mr. Vane, that, Mrs. Woffington having deserted him for Mr. Vane, and Mr.
+Vane his wife for Mrs. Woffington, the bereaved parties had, according to
+custom, agreed to console each other.
+
+This soothing little speech was interrupted by Mr. Vane's sword flashing
+suddenly out of its sheath; while that gentleman, white with rage and
+jealousy, bade him instantly take to his guard, or be run through the
+body like some noxious animal.
+
+Sir Charles drew his sword, and, in spite of Triplet's weak interference,
+half a dozen passes were rapidly exchanged, when suddenly the door of the
+inner room opened, and a lady in a hood pronounced, in a voice which was
+an excellent imitation of Mrs. Vane's, the word, "False!"
+
+The combatants lowered their points.
+
+"You hear, sir!" cried Triplet.
+
+"You see, sir!" said Pomander.
+
+"Mabel! -- wife!" cried Mr. Vane, in agony. "Oh, say this is not true!
+Oh, say that letter is a forgery! Say, at least, it was by some treachery
+you were lured to this den of iniquity! Oh, speak!"
+
+The lady silently beckoned to some person inside.
+
+"You know I loved you--you know how bitterly I repent the infatuation
+that brought me to the feet of another!"
+
+The lady replied not, though Vane's soul appeared to hang upon her
+answer. But she threw the door open and there appeared another lady, the
+real Mrs. Vane. Mrs. Woffington then threw off her hood, and, to Sir
+Charles Pomander's consternation, revealed the features of that ingenious
+person, who seemed born to outwit him.
+
+"You heard that fervent declaration, madam?" said she to Mrs. Vane. "I
+present to you, madam, a gentleman who regrets that he mistook the real
+direction of his feelings. And to you, sir," continued she, with great
+dignity, "I present a lady who will never mistake either her feelings or
+her duty."
+
+"Ernest! dear Ernest!" cried Mrs. Vane, blushing as if she was the
+culprit. And she came forward all love and tenderness.
+
+Her truant husband kneeled at her feet of course. No! he said, rather
+sternly, "How came you here, Mabel?"
+
+"Mrs. Vane," said the actress, "fancied you had mislaid that weathercock,
+your heart, in Covent Garden, and that an actress had seen in it a fit
+companion for her own, and had feloniously appropriated it. She came to
+me to inquire after it."
+
+"But this letter, signed by you?" said Vane, still addressing Mabel.
+
+"Was written by me on a paper which accidentally contained Mrs. Vane's
+name. The fact is, Mr. Vane--I can hardly look you in the face--I had a
+little wager with Sir Charles here; his diamond ring--which you may see
+has become my diamond ring"--a horrible wry face from Sir Charles--
+"against my left glove that I could bewitch a country gentleman's
+imagination, and make him think me an angel. Unfortunately the owner of
+his heart appeared, and, like poor Mr. Vane, took our play for earnest.
+It became necessary to disabuse her and to open your eyes. Have I done
+so?"
+
+"You have, madam," said Vane, wincing at each word she said. But at last,
+by a mighty effort, he mastered himself, and, coming to Mrs. Woffington
+with a quivering lip, he held out his hand suddenly in a very manly way.
+"I have been the dupe of my own vanity," said he, "and I thank you for
+this lesson." Poor Mrs. Woffington's fortitude had well-nigh left her at
+this.
+
+"Mabel," he cried, "is this humiliation any punishment for my folly? any
+guaranty for my repentance? Can you forgive me?"
+
+"It is all forgiven, Ernest. But, oh, you are mistaken." She glided to
+Mrs. Woffington. "What do we not owe you, sister?" whispered she.
+
+"Nothing! that word pays all," was the reply. She then slipped her
+address into Mrs. Vane's hand, and, courtesying to all the company, she
+hastily left the room.
+
+Sir Charles Pomander followed; but he was not quick enough. She got a
+start, and purposely avoided him, and for three days neither the public
+nor private friends saw this poor woman's face.
+
+Mr. and Mrs. Vane prepared to go also; but Mrs. Vane would thank good Mr.
+Triplet and Mrs. Triplet for their kindness to her.
+
+Triplet the benevolent blushed, was confused and delighted; but suddenly,
+turning somewhat sorrowful, he said: "Mr. Vane, madam, made use of an
+expression which caused a momentary pang. He called this a den of
+iniquity. Now this is my studio! But never mind."
+
+Mr. Vane asked his pardon for so absurd an error, and the pair left
+Triplet in all the enjoyment which does come now and then to an honest
+man, whether this dirty little world will or not.
+
+A coach was called and they went home to Bloomsbury. Few words were said;
+but the repentant husband often silently pressed this angel to his bosom,
+and the tears which found their way to her beautiful eyelashes were tears
+of joy.
+
+This weakish, and consequently villainous, though not ill-disposed person
+would have gone down to Willoughby that night; but his wife had great
+good sense. She would not take her husband off, like a school-boy caught
+out of bounds. She begged him to stay while she made certain purchases;
+but, for all that, her heart burned to be at home. So in less than a week
+after the events we have related they left London.
+
+Meantime, every day Mrs. Vane paid a quiet visit to Mrs. Woffington (for
+some days the actress admitted no other visitor), and was with her but
+two hours before she left London. On that occasion she found her very
+sad.
+
+"I shall never see you again in this world," said she; "but I beg of you
+to write to me, that my mind may be in contact with yours."
+
+She then asked Mabel, in her half-sorrowful, half-bitter way, how many
+months it would be ere she was forgotten.
+
+Mabel answered by quietly crying. So then they embraced; and Mabel
+assured her friend she was not one of those who change their minds. "It
+is for life, dear sister; it is for life," cried she.
+
+"Swear this to me," said the other, almost sternly. "But no. I have more
+confidence in that candid face and pure nature than in a human being's
+oath. If you are happy, remember you owe me something. If you are
+unhappy, come to me, and I will love you as men cannot love."
+
+Then vows passed between them, for a singular tie bound these two women;
+and then the actress showed a part at least of her sore heart to her new
+sister; and that sister was surprised and grieved, and pitied her truly
+and deeply, and they wept on each other's neck; and at last they were
+fain to part. They parted; and true it was, they never met again in this
+world. They parted in sorrow; but when they meet again, it shall be with
+joy.
+
+Women are generally such faithless, unscrupulous and pitiless humbugs in
+their dealings with their own sex--which, whatever they may say, they
+despise at heart-- that I am happy to be able to say, Mrs. Vane proved
+true as steel. She was a noble-minded, simple-minded creature; she was
+also a constant creature. Constancy is a rare, a beautiful, a godlike
+virtue.
+
+Four times every year she wrote a long letter to Mrs. Woffington; and
+twice a year, in the cold weather, she sent her a hamper of country
+delicacies that would have victualed a small garrison. And when her
+sister left this earthly scene--a humble, pious, long-repentant
+Christian-- Mrs. Vane wore mourning for her, and sorrowed over her; but
+not as those who cannot hope to meet again.
+
+-----
+
+My story as a work of art--good, bad or indifferent--ends with that last
+sentence. If a reader accompanies me further, I shall feel flattered, and
+he does so at his own risk.
+
+My reader knows that all this befell long ago. That Woffington is gay,
+and Triplet sad, no more. That Mabel's, and all the bright eyes of that
+day, have long been dim, and all its cunning voices hushed. Judge then
+whether I am one of those happy story-tellers who can end with a wedding.
+No! this story must wind up, as yours and mine must--to-morrow--or
+to-morrow--or to-morrow! when our little sand is run.
+
+Sir Charles Pomander lived a man of pleasure until sixty. He then became
+a man of pain; he dragged the chain about eight years, and died
+miserably.
+
+Mr. Cibber not so much died as "slipped his wind"--a nautical expression
+that conveys the idea of an easy exit. He went off, quiet and genteel. He
+was past eighty, and had lived fast. His servant called him at seven in
+the morning. "I will shave at eight," said Mr. Cibber. John brought the
+hot water at eight; but his master had taken advantage of this interval
+in his toilet to die!--to avoid shaving?
+
+Snarl and Soaper conducted the criticism of their day with credit and
+respectability until a good old age, and died placidly a natural death,
+like twaddle, sweet or sour.
+
+The Triplets, while their patroness lived, did pretty well. She got a
+tragedy of his accepted at her theater. She made him send her a copy, and
+with her scissors cut out about half; sometimes thinning, sometimes
+cutting bodily away. But, lo! the inherent vanity of Mr. Triplet came out
+strong. Submissively, but obstinately, he fought for the discarded
+beauties. Unluckily, he did this one day that his patroness was in one of
+her bitter humors. So she instantly gave him back his manuscript, with a
+sweet smile owned herself inferior in judgment to him, and left him
+unmolested.
+
+Triplet breathed freely; a weight was taken off him. The savage steel (he
+applied this title to the actress's scissors) had spared his _purpurei
+panni._ He was played, pure and intact, a calamity the rest of us
+grumbling escape.
+
+But it did so happen that the audience were of the actress's mind, and
+found the words too exuberant, and the business of the play too scanty in
+proportion. At last their patience was so sorely tried that they supplied
+one striking incident to a piece deficient in facts. They gave the
+manager the usual broad hint, and in the middle of Triplet's third act a
+huge veil of green baize descended upon "The Jealous Spaniard.'
+
+Failing here, Mrs. Woffington contrived often to befriend him in his
+other arts, and moreover she often sent Mr. Triplet what she called a
+snug investment, a loan of ten pounds, to be repaid at Doomsday, with
+interest and compound interest, according to the Scriptures; and,
+although she laughed, she secretly believed she was to get her ten pounds
+back, double and treble. And I believe so too.
+
+Some years later Mrs. Triplet became eventful. She fell ill, and lay a
+dying; but one fine morning, after all hope had been given up, she
+suddenly rose and dressed herself. She was quite well in body now, but
+insane.
+
+She continued in this state a month, and then, by God's mercy, she
+recovered her reason; but now the disease fell another step, and lighted
+upon her temper--a more athletic vixen was not to be found. She had
+spoiled Triplet for this by being too tame, so when the dispensation came
+they sparred daily. They were now thoroughly unhappy. They were poor as
+ever, and their benefactress was dead, and they had learned to snap. A
+speculative tour had taken this pair to Bristol, then the second city in
+England. They sojourned in the suburbs.
+
+One morning the postman brought a letter for Triplet, who was showing his
+landlord's boy how to plant onions. (N. B.-- Triplet had never planted an
+onion, but he was one of your _a priori_ gentlemen, and could show
+anybody how to do anything.) Triplet held out his hand for the letter,
+but the postman held out his hand for a half crown first. Trip's
+profession had transpired, and his clothes inspired diffidence. Triplet
+appealed to his good feeling.
+
+He replied with exultation, "That he had none left." (A middle-aged
+postman, no doubt.)
+
+Triplet then suddenly started from entreaty to King Cambyses' vein. In
+vain!
+
+Mrs. Triplet came down, and essayed the blandishments of the softer sex.
+In vain! And, as there were no assets, the postman marched off down the
+road.
+
+Mrs. Triplet glided after him like an assassin, beckoning on Triplet, who
+followed, doubtful of her designs. Suddenly (truth compels me to relate
+this) she seized the obdurate official from behind, pinned both his arms
+to his side, and with her nose furiously telegraphed her husband.
+
+He, animated by her example, plunged upon the man and tore the letter
+from his hand and opened it before his eyes.
+
+It happened to be a very windy morning, and when he opened the letter an
+inclosure, printed on much finer paper, was caught into the air and went
+down the wind. Triplet followed in kangaroo leaps, like a dancer making a
+flying exit.
+
+The postman cried on all good citizens for help. Some collected and
+laughed at him; Mrs. Triplet explaining that they were poor, and could
+not pay half a crown for the freight of half an ounce of paper. She held
+him convulsively until Triplet reappeared.
+
+That gentleman on his return was ostentatiously calm and dignified. "You
+are, or were, in perturbation about half a crown," said he. "There, sir,
+is a twenty-pound note, oblige me with nineteen pounds seventeen
+shillings and sixpence. Should your resources be unequal to such a
+demand, meet me at the 'Green Cat and Brown Frogs,' after dinner, when
+you shall receive your half-crown, and drink another upon the occasion of
+my sudden accession to unbounded affluence."
+
+The postman was staggered by the sentence and overawed by the note, and
+chose the "Cat and Frogs," and liquid half-crown.
+
+Triplet took his wife down the road and showed her the letter and
+inclosure. The letter ran thus:
+
+"SIR--We beg respectfully to inform you that our late friend and client,
+James Triplet, Merchant, of the Minories, died last August, without a
+will, and that you are his heir.
+
+"His property amounts to about twenty thousand pounds, besides some
+reversions. Having possessed the confidence of your late uncle we should
+feel honored and gratified if you should think us worthy to act
+professionally for yourself.
+
+"We inclose twenty pounds, and beg you will draw upon us as far as five
+thousand pounds, should you have immediate occasion.
+
+"We are, sir,
+
+"Your humble servants,
+
+"JAMES AND JOHN ALLMITT."
+
+It was some time before these children of misfortune could realize this
+enormous stroke of compensation; but at last it worked its way into their
+spirits, and they began to sing, to triumph, and dance upon the king's
+highway.
+
+Mrs. Triplet was the first to pause, and take better views. "Oh, James!"
+she cried, "we have suffered much! we have been poor, but honest, and the
+Almighty has looked upon us at last!"
+
+Then they began to reproach themselves.
+
+"Oh, James! I have been a peevish woman--an ill wife to you, this many
+years!"
+
+"No, no!" cried Triplet, with tears in his eyes. "It is I who have been
+rough and brutal. Poverty tried us too hard; but we were not like the
+rest of them--we were always faithful to the altar. And the Almighty has
+seen us, though we often doubted it."
+
+"I never doubted that, James."
+
+So then the poor things fell on their knees upon the public road, and
+thanked God. If any man had seen them, he would have said they were mad.
+Yet madder things are done every day by gentlemen with faces as grave as
+the parish bull's. And then they rose and formed their little plans.
+
+Triplet was for devoting four-fifths to charity, and living like a prince
+on the remainder. But Mrs. Triplet thought the poor were entitled to no
+more than two-thirds, and they themselves ought to bask in a third, to
+make up for what they had gone through; and then suddenly she sighed, and
+burst into tears. "Lucy! Lucy!" sobbed she.
+
+Yes, reader, God had taken little Lucy! And her mother cried to think all
+this wealth and comfort had come too late for her darling child.
+
+"Do not cry. Lucy is richer, a thousand times, than you are, with your
+twenty thousand pounds."
+
+Their good resolutions were carried out, for a wonder. Triplet lived for
+years, the benefactor of all the loose fish that swim in and round
+theaters; and, indeed, the unfortunate seldom appealed to him in vain. He
+now predominated over the arts, instead of climbing them. In his latter
+day he became an oracle, as far as the science of acting was concerned;
+and, what is far more rare, he really got to know _something_ about it.
+This was owing to two circumstances: first, he ceased to run blindfold in
+a groove behind the scenes; second, he became a frequenter of the first
+row of the pit, and that is where the whole critic, and two-thirds of the
+true actor, is made.
+
+On one point, to his dying day, his feelings guided his judgment. He
+never could see an actress equal to his Woffington. Mrs. Abington was
+grace personified, but so was Woffington, said the old man: and
+Abington's voice is thin, Woffington's was sweet and mellow. When Jordan
+rose, with her voice of honey, her dewy freshness, and her heavenly
+laugh, that melted in along with her words, like the gold in the quartz,
+Triplet was obliged to own her the goddess of beautiful gayety; but still
+he had the last word: "Woffington was all _she_ is, except her figure.
+Woffington was a Hebe; your Nell Jordan is little better than a dowdy."
+
+Triplet almost reached the present century. He passed through great
+events, but they did not excite him; his eye was upon the arts. When
+Napoleon drew his conquering sword on England, Triplet's remark was: "Now
+we shall be driven upon native talent, thank Heaven!" The storms of
+Europe shook not Triplet. The fact is, nothing that happened on the great
+stage of the world seemed real to him. He believed in nothing where there
+was no curtain visible. But even the grotesque are not good in vain. Many
+an eye was wet round his dying bed, and many a tear fell upon his grave.
+He made his final exit in the year of grace 1799. And I, who laugh at
+him, would leave this world to-day to be with him; for I am tossing at
+sea--he is in port.
+
+-----
+
+A straightforward character like Mabel's becomes a firm character with
+years. Long ere she was forty, her hand gently but steadily ruled
+Willoughby House, and all in it. She and Mr. Vane lived very happily; he
+gave her no fresh cause for uneasiness. Six months after their return,
+she told him what burned in that honest heart of hers, the truth about
+Mrs. Woffington. The water rushed to his eyes, but his heart was now
+wholly his wife's; and gratitude to Mrs. Woffington for her noble conduct
+was the only sentiment awakened.
+
+"You must repay her, dearest," said he. "I know you love her, and until
+to-day it gave me pain; now it gives me pleasure. We owe her much."
+
+The happy, innocent life of Mabel Vane is soon summed up. Frank as the
+day, constant as the sun, pure as the dew, she passed the golden years
+preparing herself and others for a still brighter eternity. At home, it
+was she who warmed and cheered the house, and the hearth, more than all
+Christmas fires. Abroad, she shone upon the poor like the sun. She led
+her beloved husband by the hand to Heaven. She led her children the same
+road; and she was leading her grandchildren when the angel of death came
+for her; and she slept in peace.
+
+Many remember her. For she alone, of all our tale, lived in this present
+century; but they speak of her as "old Madam Vane"--her whom we knew so
+young and fresh.
+
+She lies in Willoughby Church--her mortal part; her spirit is with the
+spirits of our mothers and sisters, reader, that are gone before us; with
+the tender mothers, the chaste wives, the loyal friends, and the just
+women of all ages.
+
+RESURGET.
+
+I come to her last, who went first; but I could not have stayed by the
+others, when once I had laid my darling asleep. It seemed for a while as
+if the events of our tale did her harm; but it was not so in the end.
+
+Not many years afterward, she was engaged by Mr. Sheridan, at a very
+heavy salary, and went to Dublin. Here the little girl, who had often
+carried a pitcher on her head down to the Liffey, and had played Polly
+Peachum in a booth, became a lion; dramatic, political and literary, and
+the center of the wit of that wittiest of cities.
+
+But the Dublin ladies and she did not coalesce. They said she was a
+naughty woman, and not fit for them morally. She said they had but two
+topics, "silks and scandal," and were unfit for her intellectually.
+
+This was the saddest part of her history. But it is darkest just before
+sunrise. She returned to London. Not long after, it so happened that she
+went to a small church in the city one Sunday afternoon. The preacher was
+such as we have often heard; but not so this poor woman, in her day of
+sapless theology, ere John Wesley waked the snoring church. Instead of
+sending a dry clatter of morality about their ears, or evaporating the
+Bible in the thin generalities of the pulpit, this man drove God's truths
+home to the hearts of men and women. In his hands the divine virtues were
+thunderbolts, not swans' down. With good sense, plain speaking, and a
+heart yearning for the souls of his brethren and his sisters, he stormed
+the bosoms of many; and this afternoon, as he reasoned like Paul of
+righteousness, temperance, and judgment to come, sinners trembled--and
+Margaret Woffington was of those who trembled.
+
+After this day, she came ever to the narrow street where shone this house
+of God; and still new light burst upon her heart and conscience. Here she
+learned why she was unhappy; here she learned how alone she could be
+happy; here she learned to know herself; and, the moment she knew
+herself, she abhorred herself, and repented in dust and ashes.
+
+This strong and straightforward character made no attempt to reconcile
+two things that an average Christian would have continued to reconcile.
+Her interest fell in a moment before her new sense of right. She flung
+her profession from her like a poisonous weed.
+
+Long before this, Mrs. Vane had begged her to leave the stage. She had
+replied, that it was to her what wine is to weak stomachs. "But," added
+she, "do not fear that I will ever crawl down hill, and unravel my own
+reputation; nor will I ever do as I have seen others--stand groaning at
+the wing, to go on giggling and come off gasping. No! the first night the
+boards do not spring beneath my feet, and the pulse of the public beat
+under my hand, I am gone! Next day, at rehearsal, instead of Woffington,
+a note will come, to tell the manager that henceforth Woffington is
+herself--at Twickenham, or Richmond, or Harrow-on-the-Hill, far from his
+dust, his din, and his glare--quiet, till God takes her. Amid grass, and
+flowers, and charitable deeds."
+
+This day had not come. It was in the zenith of her charms and her fame
+that she went home one night after a play, and never entered a theater,
+by the front door or back door, again. She declined all leave-taking and
+ceremony.
+
+"When a publican shuts up shop and ceases to diffuse liquid poison, he
+does not invite the world to put up the shutters; neither will I. Actors
+overrate themselves ridiculously," added she; "I am not of that
+importance to the world, nor the world to me. I fling away a dirty old
+glove instead of soiling my fingers filling it with more guineas, and the
+world loses in me, what? another old glove, full of words; half of them
+idle, the rest wicked, untrue, silly, or impure. _Rougissons,
+taisons-nous, et partons."_
+
+She now changed her residence, and withdrew politely from her old
+associates, courting two classes only, the good and the poor. She had
+always supported her mother and sister; but now charity became her
+system. The following is characteristic:
+
+A gentleman who had greatly admired this dashing actress met one day, in
+the suburbs, a lady in an old black silk gown and a gray shawl, with a
+large basket on her arm. She showed him its contents--worsted stockings
+of prodigious thickness--which she was carrying to some of her
+_proteges._
+
+"But surely that is a waste of your valuable time," remonstrated her
+admirer. "Much better buy them."
+
+"But, my good soul," replied the representative of Sir Harry Wildair,
+"you can't buy them. Nobody in this wretched town can knit worsted hose
+except Woffington."
+
+Conversions like this are open to just suspicion, and some did not fail
+to confound her with certain great sinners, who have turned austere
+self-deceivers when sin smiled no more. But this was mere conjecture. The
+facts were clear, and speaking to the contrary. This woman left folly at
+its brightest, and did not become austere. On the contrary, though she
+laughed less, she was observed to smile far oftener than before. She was
+a humble and penitent, but cheerful, hopeful Christian.
+
+Another class of detractors took a somewhat opposite ground. They accused
+her of bigotry for advising a young female friend against the stage as a
+business. But let us hear herself. This is what she said to the girl:
+
+"At the bottom of my heart, I always loved and honored virtue. Yet the
+tendencies of the stage so completely overcame my good sentiments that I
+was for years a worthless woman. It is a situation of uncommon and
+incessant temptation. Ask yourself, my child, whether there is nothing
+else you can do, but this. It is, I think, our duty and our wisdom to fly
+temptation whenever we can, as it is to resist it when we cannot escape
+it."
+
+Was this the tone of bigotry?
+
+Easy in fortune, penitent, but cheerful, Mrs. Woffington had now but one
+care--to efface the memory of her former self, and to give as many years
+to purity and piety as had gone to folly and frailty. This was not to be!
+The Almighty did not permit, or perhaps I should say, did not require
+this.
+
+Some unpleasant symptoms had long attracted her notice, but in the bustle
+of her profession had received little attention. She was now persuaded by
+her own medical attendant to consult Dr. Bowdler, who had a great
+reputation, and had been years ago an acquaintance and an admirer. He
+visited her, he examined her by means little used in that day, and he saw
+at once that her days were numbered.
+
+ Dr. Bowdler's profession and experience had not steeled his heart as
+they generally do and must do. He could not tell her this sad news, so he
+asked her for pen and paper, and said, I will write a prescription to Mr.
+----. He then wrote, not a prescription, but a few lines, begging Mr.
+---- to convey the cruel intelligence by degrees, and with care and
+tenderness. "It is all we can do for her," said he.
+
+He looked so grave while writing the supposed prescription, that it
+unluckily occurred to Mrs. Woffington to look over him. She stole archly
+behind him, and, with a smile on her face--read her death warrant.
+
+It was a cruel stroke! A gasping sigh broke from her. At this Dr. Bowdler
+looked up, and to his horror saw the sweet face he had doomed to the tomb
+looking earnestly and anxiously at him, and very pale and grave. He was
+shocked, and, strange to say, she, whose death-warrant he had signed, ran
+and brought him a glass of wine, for he was quite overcome. Then she gave
+him her hand in her own sweet way, and bade him not grieve for her, for
+she was not afraid to die, and had long learned that "life is a walking
+shadow, a poor, poor player, who frets and struts his hour upon the
+stage, and then is heard no more."
+
+But no sooner was the doctor gone than she wept bitterly. Poor soul! she
+had set her heart upon living as many years to God as she had to the
+world, and she had hoped to wipe out her former self.
+
+"Alas!" she said to her sister, "I have done more harm than I can ever
+hope to good now; and my long life of folly and wickedness will be
+remembered--will be what they call famous; my short life of repentance
+who will know, or heed, or take to profit?"
+
+But she soon ceased to repine. She bowed to the will of Heaven, and set
+her house in order, and awaited her summons. The tranquillity of her life
+and her courageous spirit were unfavorable to the progress of disease,
+and I am glad to say she was permitted to live nearly three years after
+this, and these three years were the happiest period of her whole life.
+Works of piety and love made the days eventful. She was at home now--she
+had never been at home in folly and loose living. All her bitterness was
+gone now, with its cause.
+
+Reader, it was with her as it is with many an autumn day; clouds darken
+the sun, rain and wind sweep over all--till day declines. But then comes
+one heavenly hour, when all ill things seem spent. There is no more wind,
+no more rain. The great sun comes forth--not fiery bright indeed, but
+full of tranquil glory, and warms the sky with ruby waves, and the hearts
+of men with hope, as, parting with us for a little space, he glides
+slowly and peacefully to rest.
+
+So fared it with this humble, penitent, and now happy Christian.
+
+A part of her desire was given her. She lived long enough to read a firm
+recantation of her former self, to show the world a great repentance, and
+to leave upon indelible record one more proof, what alone is true wisdom,
+and where alone true joys are to be found.
+
+She endured some physical pain, as all must who die in their prime. But
+this never wrung a sigh from her great heart; and within she had the
+peace of God, which passes all understanding.
+
+I am not strong enough to follow her to her last hour; nor is it needed.
+Enough that her own words came true. When the great summons came, it
+found her full of hope, and peace, and joy; sojourning, not dwelling,
+upon earth; far from dust and din and vice; the Bible in her hand, the
+Cross in her heart; quiet; amid grass, and flowers, and charitable deeds.
+
+"NON OMNEM MORITURAM."
+
+
+
+
+
+End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of Peg Woffington, by Charles Reade
+
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