.
Chapter 11
‘Then, madam,’ says she,
‘if the child should not live, or should be dead-born, as you know sometimes
happens, then there is the minister’s article saved; and if you have no
friends to come to you, you may save the expense of a supper; so that take
those articles out, madam,’ says she, ‘your lying in will not cost
you above 5 l, 3s. in all more than your ordinary charge
of living.’
This was the most reasonable
thing that I ever heard of; so I smiled, and told her I would come and
be her customer; but I told her also, that as I had two months and
more to do, I might perhaps be obliged to stay longer with her than three
months, and desired to know if she would not be obliged to remove me before
it was proper. No, she said; her house was large, and besides, she
never put anybody to remove, that had lain in, till they were willing to
go; and if she had more ladies offered, she was not so ill-beloved among
her Neighbours but she could provide accommodations for twenty, if there
was occasion.
I found she was an eminent lady
in her way; and, in short, I agreed to put myself into her hands,
and promised her. She then talked of other things, looked about into my
accommodations where I was, found fault with my wanting attendance and
conveniences, and that I should not be used so at her house. I told
her I was shy of speaking, for the woman of the house looked stranger,
or at least I thought so, since I had been ill, because I was with child;
and I was afraid she would put some affront or other upon me, supposing
that I had been able to give but a slight account of myself.
‘Oh dear,’ said she,
‘her ladyship is no stranger to these things; she has tried to entertain
ladies in your condition several times, but she could not secure the parish;
and besides, she is not such a nice lady as you take her to be; however,
since you are a-going, you shall not meddle with her, but I’ll see you
are a little better looked after while you are here than I think you are,
and it shall not cost you the more neither.’
I did not understand her at
all; however, I thanked her, and so we parted. The next morning she sent
me a chicken roasted and hot, and a pint bottle of sherry, and ordered
the maid to tell me that she was to wait on me every day as long as I stayed
there.
This was surprisingly good and
kind, and I accepted it very willingly. At night she sent to me again,
to know if I wanted anything, and how I did, and to order the maid to come
to her in the morning with my dinner. The maid had orders to make me some
chocolate in the morning before she came away, and did so, and at noon
she brought me the sweetbread of a breast of veal, whole, and a dish of
soup for my dinner; and after this manner she nursed me up at a distance,
so that I was mightily well pleased, and quickly well, for indeed my dejections
before were the principal part of my illness.
I expected, as is usually the
case among such people, that the servant she sent me would have been some
imprudent brazen wench of Drury-Lane breeding, and I was very uneasy
at having her with me upon that account; so I would not let her lie in
that house the first night by any means, but had my eyes about me as narrowly
as if she had been a public thief.
My gentlewoman guessed presently
what was the matter, and sent her back with a short note, that I might
depend upon the honesty of her maid; that she would be answerable for her
upon all accounts; and that she took no servants into her house without
very good security for their fidelity. I was then perfectly easy; and indeed
the maid’s behaviour spoke for itself, for a modester, quieter, soberer
girl never came into anybody’s family, and I found her so afterwards.
As soon as I was well enough
to go abroad, I went with the maid to see the house, and to see the apartment
I was to have; and everything was so handsome and so clean and well, that,
in short, I had nothing to say, but was wonderfully pleased and satisfied
with what I had met with, which, considering the melancholy circumstances
I was in, was far beyond what I looked for.
It might be expected that I
should give some account of the nature of the wicked practices of this
woman, in whose hands I was now fallen; but it would be too much encouragement
to the vice, to let the world see what easy measures were here taken to
rid the women’s unwelcome Burthen of a child clandestinely gotten. This
grave matron had several sorts of practice, and this was one particular,
that if a child was born, though not in her house (for she had occasion
to be called to many private Labours, she had people at hand, who for a
piece of money would take the child off their hands, and off from the hands
of the parish too; and those children, as she said, were honestly provided
for and taken care of. What should become of them all, considering so many,
as by her account she was concerned with, I cannot conceive.
I had many times discourses
upon that subject with her; but she was full of this argument, that she
save the life of many an innocent lamb, as she called them, which would
otherwise perhaps have been murdered; and of many women who, made desperate
by the misfortune, would otherwise be tempted to destroy their children,
and bring themselves to the gallows. I granted her that this was true,
and a very commendable thing, provided the poor children fell into good
hands afterwards, and were not abused, starved, and neglected by the nurses
that bred them up. She answered, that she always took care of that, and
had no nurses in her business but what were very good, honest people, and
such as might be depended upon.
I could say nothing to the contrary,
and so was obliged to say, ‘Madam, I do not question you do your part honestly,
but what those people do afterwards is the main question’; and she stopped
my mouth again with saying that she took the utmost care about it.
The only thing I found in all
her conversation on these subjects that gave me any distaste, was, that
one time in discouraging about my being far gone with child, and the time
I expected to come, she said something that looked as if she could help
me off with my Burthen sooner, if I was willing; or, in English,
that she could give me something to make me miscarry, if I had a desire
to put an end to my troubles that way; but I soon let her see that I abhorred
the thoughts of it; and, to do her justice, she put it off so cleverly,
that I could not say she really intended it, or whether she only mentioned
the practice as a horrible thing; for she couched her words so well, and
took my meaning so quickly, that she gave her negative before I could explain
myself.
To bring this part into as narrow
a compass as possible, I quitted my lodging at St. Jones’s and went
to my new governess, for so they called her in the house, and there I was
indeed treated with so much courtesy, so carefully looked to, so handsomely
provided, and everything so well, that I was surprised at it, and could
not at first see what advantage my governess made of it; but I found afterwards
that she professed to make no profit of lodgers’ diet, nor indeed could
she get much by it, but that her profit lay in the other articles of her
management, and she made enough that way, I assure you; for ’tis scarce
credible what practice she had, as well abroad as at home, and yet all
upon the private account, or, in plain English, the whoring account.
While I was in her house, which
was near four months, she had no less than twelve ladies of pleasure brought
to bed within the doors, and I think she had two-and-thirty, or thereabouts,
under her conduct without doors, whereof one, as nice as she was with me,
was lodged with my old landlady at St. Jones’s.
This was a strange testimony
of the growing vice of the age, and such a one, that as bad as I had been
myself, it shocked my very senses. I began to nauseate the place I was
in and, about all, the wicked practice; and yet I must say that I never
saw, or do I believe there was to be seen, the least indecency in the house
the whole time I was there.
Not a man was ever seen to come
upstairs, except to visit the lying-in ladies within their month, nor then
without the old lady with them, who made it a piece of Honour of her management
that no man should touch a woman, no, not his own wife, within the month;
nor would she permit any man to lie in the house upon any pretence whatever,
no, not though she was sure it was with his own wife; and her general saying
for it was, that she cared not how many children were born in her house,
but she would have none got there if she could help it.
It might perhaps be carried
further than was needful, but it was an error of the right hand if it was
an error, for by this she kept up the reputation, such as it was, of her
business, and obtained this character, that though she did take care of
the women when they were debauched, yet she was not instrumental to their
being debauched at all; and yet it was a wicked trade she drove too.
While I was there, and before
I was brought to bed, I received a letter from my trustee at the bank,
full of kind, obliging things, and earnestly pressing me to return to London.
It was near a fortnight old when it came to me, because it had been first
sent into Lancashire, and then returned to me. He concludes with
telling me that he had obtained a decree, I think he called it, against
his wife, and that he would be ready to make good his engagement to me,
if I would accept of him, adding a great many protestations of kindness
and affection, such as he would have been far from offering if he had known
the circumstances I had been in, and which as it was I had been very far
from deserving.
I returned an answer to his
letter, and dated it at Leverpool, but sent it by messenger, alleging
that it came in cover to a friend in town. I gave him joy of his deliverance,
but raised some scruples at the lawfulness of his marrying again, and told
him I supposed he would consider very seriously upon that point before
he resolved on it, the consequence being too great for a man of his judgment
to venture rashly upon a thing of that nature; so concluded, wishing him
very well in whatever he resolved, without letting him into anything of
my own mind, or giving any answer to his proposal of my coming to London
to him, but mentioned at a distance my intention to return the latter end
of the year, this being dated in April. I was brought to bed
about the middle of May and had another brave boy, and myself in
as good condition as usual on such occasions. My governess did her part
as a midwife with the greatest art and dexterity imaginable, and far beyond
all that ever I had had any experience of before.
Her care of me in my travail,
and after in my lying in, was such, that if she had been my own mother
it could not have been better. Let none be encouraged in their loose practices
from this dexterous lady’s management, for she is gone to her place, and
I dare say has left nothing behind her that can or will come up on it.
I think I had been brought to
bed about twenty-two days when I received another letter from my friend
at the bank, with the surprising news that he had obtained a final sentence
of divorce against his wife, and had served her with it on such a day,
and that he had such an answer to give to all my scruples about his marrying
again, as I could not expect, and as he had no desire of; for that his
wife, who had been under some remorse before for her usage of him, as soon
as she had the account that he had gained his point, had very unhappily
destroyed herself that same evening.
He expressed himself very handsomely
as to his being concerned at her disaster, but cleared himself of having
any hand in it, and that he had only done himself justice in a case in
which he was notoriously injured and abused. However, he said that he was
extremely afflicted at it, and had no view of any satisfaction left in
his world, but only in the hope that I would come and relieve him by my
company; and then he pressed me violently indeed to give him some hopes
that I would at least come up to town and let him see me, when he would
further enter into discourse about it.
I was exceedingly surprised
at the news, and began now seriously to reflect on my present circumstances,
and the inexpressible misfortune it was to me to have a child upon my hands,
and what to do in it I knew not. At last I opened my case at a distance
to my governess. I appeared melancholy and uneasy for several days, and
she lay at me continually to know what trouble me. I could not for my life
tell her that I had an offer of marriage, after I had so often told her
that I had a husband, so that I really knew not what to say to her. I owned
I had something which very much troubled me, but at the same time told
her I could not speak of it to any one alive.
She continued importuning me
several days, but it was impossible, I told her, for me to commit
the secret to anybody. This, instead of being an answer to her, increased
her importunities; she urged her having been trusted with the greatest
secrets of this nature, that it was her business to conceal everything,
and that to discover things of that nature would be her ruin. She asked
me if ever I had found her tattling to me of other people’s affairs, and
how could I suspect her? She told me, to unfold myself to her was
telling it to nobody; that she was silent as death; that it must be a very
strange case indeed that she could not help me out of; but to conceal it
was to deprive myself of all possible help, or means of help, and to deprive
her of the opportunity of serving me. In short, she had such a bewitching
eloquence, and so great a power of persuasion that there was no concealing
anything from her.
So I resolved to unbosome myself
to her. I told her the history of my Lancashire marriage, and how
both of us had been disappointed; how we came together, and how we parted;
how he absolutely discharged me, as far as lay in him, free liberty to
marry again, protesting that if he knew it he would never claim me, or
disturb or expose me; that I thought I was free, but was dreadfully afraid
to venture, for fear of the consequences that might follow in case of a
discovery.
Then I told her what a good
offer I had; showed her my friend’s two last letters, inviting me to come
to London, and let her see with what affection and earnestness they
were written, but blotted out the name, and also the story about the disaster
of his wife, only that she was dead.
She fell a-laughing at my scruples
about marrying, and told me the other was no marriage, but a cheat on both
sides; and that, as we were parted by mutual consent, the nature of the
contract was destroyed, and the obligation was mutually discharged. She
had arguments for this at the tip of her tongue; and, in short,
reasoned me out of my reason; not but that it was too by the help of my
own inclination.
But then came the great and
main difficulty, and that was the child; this, she told me in so many words,
must be removed, and that so as that it should never be possible for any
one to discover it. I knew there was no marrying without entirely concealing
that I had had a child, for he would soon have discovered by the age of
it that it was born, nay, and gotten too, since my parley with him, and
that would have destroyed all the affair.
But it touched my heart so forcibly
to think of parting entirely with the child, and, for aught I knew, of
having it murdered, or starved by neglect and ill-usage (which was much
the same), that I could not think of it without horror. I wish all those
women who consent to the disposing their children out of the way, as
it is called, for decency sake, would consider that ’tis only a contrived
method for murder; that is to say, a-killing their children with safety.
It is manifest to all that understand
anything of children, that we are born into the world helpless, and incapable
either to supply our own wants or so much as make them known; and that
without help we must perish; and this help requires not only an assisting
hand, whether of the mother or somebody else, but there are two things
necessary in that assisting hand, that is, care and skill; without both
which, half the children that are born would die, nay, thought they were
not to be denied food; and one half more of those that remained would be
cripples or fools, lose their limbs, and perhaps their sense. I question
not but that these are partly the reasons why affection was placed by nature
in the hearts of mothers to their children; without which they would never
be able to give themselves up, as ’tis necessary they should, to the care
and waking pains needful to the support of their children.
Since this care is needful to
the life of children, to neglect them is to murder them; again, to give
them up to be managed by those people who have none of that needful affection
placed by nature in them, is to neglect them in the highest degree; nay,
in some it goes farther, and is a neglect in order to their being lost;
so that ’tis even an intentional murder, whether the child lives or dies.
All those things represented
themselves to my view, and that is the blackest and most frightful form:
and as I was very free with my governess, whom I had now learned to call
mother, I represented to her all the dark thoughts which I had upon me
about it, and told her what distress I was in. She seemed graver by much
at this part than at the other; but as she was hardened in these things
beyond all possibility of being touched with the religious part, and the
scruples about the murder, so she was equally impenetrable in that part
which related to affection. She asked me if she had not been careful and
tender to me in my lying in, as if I had been her own child. I told her
I owned she had. ‘Well, my dear,’ says she, ‘and when you are gone, what
are you to me? And what would it be to me if you were to be hanged? Do
you think there are not women who, as it is their trade and they get their
bread by it, value themselves upon their being as careful of children as
their own mothers can be, and understand it rather better? Yes, yes, child,’
says
she, ‘fear it not; how were we nursed ourselves? Are you sure you was
nursed up by your own mother? and yet you look fat and fair, child,’ says
the old beldam; and with that she stroked me over the face. ‘Never be concerned,
child,’ says she, going on in her drolling way; ‘I have no murderers
about me; I employ the best and the honestest nurses that can be had, and
have as few children miscarry under their hands as there would if they
were all nursed by mothers; we want neither care nor skill.’
She touched me to the quick
when she asked if I was sure that I was nursed by my own mother; on the
contrary I was sure I was not; and I trembled, and looked pale at the very
expression. ‘Sure,’ said I to myself, ‘this creature cannot be a witch,
or have any conversation with a spirit, that can inform her what was done
with me before I was able to know it myself’; and I looked at her as if
I had been frightened; but reflecting that it could not be possible for
her to know anything about me, that disorder went off, and I began to be
easy, but it was not presently.
She perceived the disorder I
was in, but did not know the meaning of it; so she ran on in her wild talk
upon the weakness of my supposing that children were murdered because they
were not all nursed by the mother, and to persuade me that the children
she disposed of were as well used as if the mothers had the nursing of
them themselves.
‘It may be true, mother,’ says
I, ‘for aught I know, but my doubts are very strongly grounded indeed.’
‘Come, then,’ says she, ‘let’s hear some of them.’ ‘Why, first,’
says
I, ‘you give a piece of money to these people to take the child off
the parent’s hands, and to take care of it as long as it lives. Now we
know, mother,’ said I, ‘that those are poor people, and their gain
consists in being quit of the charge as soon as they can; how can I doubt
but that, as it is best for them to have the child die, they are not over
solicitous about life?’
‘This is all Vapours and fancy,’
says
the old woman; ‘I tell you their credit depends upon the child’s life,
and they are as careful as any mother of you all.’
‘O mother,’ says I, ‘if
I was but sure my little baby would be carefully looked to, and have justice
done it, I should be happy indeed; but it is impossible I can be satisfied
in that point unless I saw it, and to see it would be ruin and destruction
to me, as now my case stands; so what to do I know not.’
‘A fine story!’ says the
governess. ‘You would see the child, and you would not see the child;
you would be concealed and discovered both together. These are things impossible,
my dear; so you must e’n do as other conscientious mothers have done before
you, and be contented with things as they must be, though they are not
as you wish them to be.’
I understood what she meant
by conscientious mothers; she would have said conscientious whores, but
she was not willing to disoblige me, for really in this case I was not
a whore, because legally married, the force of former marriage excepted.
However, let me be what I would, I was not come up to that pitch of hardness
common to the profession; I mean, to be unnatural, and regardless of the
safety of my child; and I preserved this honest affection so long, that
I was upon the point of giving up my friend at the bank, who lay
so hard at me to come to him and marry him, that, in short, there
was hardly any room to deny him.
At last my old governess came
to me, with her usual assurance. ‘Come, my dear,’ says she, ‘I have
found out a way how you shall be at a certainty that your child shall be
used well, and yet the people that take care of it shall never know you,
or who the mother of the child is.’
‘Oh mother,’ says I,
‘if you can do so, you will engage me to you for ever.’ ‘Well,’ says
she, ‘are you willing to be a some small annual expense, more than
what we usually give to the people we contract with?’ ‘Ay,’ says I,
‘with all my heart, provided I may be concealed.’ ‘As to that,’ says the
governess, ‘you shall be secure, for the nurse shall never so much
as dare to inquire about you, and you shall once or twice a year go with
me and see your child, and see how ’tis used, and be satisfied that it
is in good hands, nobody knowing who you are.’
‘Why,’ said I, ‘do you
think, mother, that when I come to see my child, I shall be able to conceal
my being the mother of it? Do you think that possible?’
‘Well, well,’ says my governess,
‘if you discover it, the nurse shall be never the wiser; for she shall
be forbid to ask any questions about you, or to take any notice. If she
offers it, she shall lose the money which you are suppose to give her,
and the child shall be taken from her too.’
I was very well pleased with
this. So the next week a countrywoman was brought from Hertford,
or thereabouts, who was to take the child off our hands entirely for 10
l
in money. But if I would allow 5 l a year more of her, she would
be obliged to bring the child to my governess’s house as often as we desired,
or we should come down and look at it, and see how well she used it.
The woman was very wholesome-looking, a likely woman, a cottager’s wife,
but she had very good clothes and linen, and everything well about her;
and with a heavy heart and many a tear, I let her have my child. I had
been down at Hertford, and looked at her and at her dwelling, which
I liked well enough; and I promised her great things if she would be kind
to the child, so she knew at first word that I was the child’s mother.
But she seemed to be so much out of the way, and to have no room to inquire
after me, that I thought I was safe enough. So, in short, I consented to
let her have the child, and I gave her 10 l; that is to say, I gave
it to my governess, who gave it the poor woman before my face, she agreeing
never to return the child back to me, or to claim anything more for its
keeping or bringing up; only that I promised, if she took a great deal
of care of it, I would give her something more as often as I came to see
it; so that I was not bound to pay the 5
l, only that I promised
my governess I would do it. And thus my great care was over, after a manner,
which though it did not at all satisfy my mind, yet was the most convenient
for me, as my affairs then stood, of any that could be thought of at that
time.
I then began to write to my
friend at the bank in a more kindly style, and particularly about the beginning
of July I sent him a letter, that I proposed to be in town some
time in August. He returned me an answer in the most passionate
terms imaginable, and desired me to let him have timely notice, and he
would come and meet me, two day’s journey. This puzzled me scurvily, and
I did not know what answer to make of it. Once I resolved to take the stage-coach
to West-Chester, on purpose only to have the satisfaction of coming
back, that he might see me really come in the same coach; for I had a jealous
thought, though I had no ground for it at all, lest he should think I was
not really in the country. And it was no ill-grounded thought as you shall
hear presently.
I endeavour’d to reason myself
out of it, but it was in vain; the impression lay so strong on my mind,
that it was not to be resisted. At last it came as an addition to my new
design of going into the country, that it would be an excellent blind to
my old governess, and would cover entirely all my other affairs, for she
did not know in the least whether my new lover lived in London or
in Lancashire; and when I told her my resolution, she was fully
persuaded it was in Lancashire.
Having taken my measure for
this journey I let her know it, and sent the maid that tended me, from
the beginning, to take a place for me in the coach. She would have had
me let the maid have waited on me down to the last stage, and come up again
in the Waggon, but I convinced her it would not be convenient. When I went
away, she told me she would enter into no measures for correspondence,
for she saw evidently that my affection to my child would cause me to write
to her, and to visit her too when I came to town again. I assured her it
would, and so took my leave, well satisfied to have been freed from such
a house, however good my accommodations there had been, as I have related
above.
I took the place in the coach
not to its full extent, but to a place called Stone, in Cheshire,
I think it is, where I not only had no manner of business, but not so much
as the least acquaintance with any person in the town or near it. But I
knew that with money in the pocket one is at home anywhere; so I lodged
there two or three days, till, watching my opportunity, I found room in
another stage-coach, and took passage back again for London, sending
a letter to my gentleman that I should be such a certain day at Stony-Stratford,
where the coachman told me he was to lodge.
It happened to be a chance coach
that I had taken up, which, having been hired on purpose to carry some
gentlemen to West-Chester who were going for Ireland, was
now returning, and did not tie itself to exact times or places as the stages
did; so that, having been obliged to lie still on Sunday, he had
time to get himself ready to come out, which otherwise he could not have
done.
However, his warning was so
short, that he could not reach to Stony-Stratford time enough to
be with me at night, but he met me at a place called Brickill the next
morning, as we were just coming in to tow.
I confess I was very glad to
see him, for I had thought myself a little disappointed over-night, seeing
I had gone so far to contrive my coming on purpose. He pleased me doubly
too by the figure he came in, for he brought a very handsome (gentleman’s)
coach and four horses, with a servant to attend him.
He took me out of the stage-coach
immediately, which stopped at an inn in Brickill; and putting into
the same in, he set up his own coach, and bespoke his dinner. I asked him
what he meant by that, for I was for going forward with the journey. He
said, No, I had need of a little rest upon the road, and that was a very
good sort of a house, though it was but a little town; so we would go no
farther that night, whatever came of it.
I did not press him much, for
since he had come so to meet me, and put himself to so much expense, it
was but reasonable I should oblige him a little too; so I was easy as to
that point.
After dinner we walked to see
the town, to see the church, and to view the fields, and the country, as
is usual for strangers to do; and our landlord was our guide in going to
see the church. I observed my gentleman inquired pretty much about the
parson, and I took the hint immediately that he certainly would propose
to be married; and though it was a sudden thought, it followed presently,
that, in short, I would not refuse him; for, to be plain, with my circumstances
I was in no condition now to say No; I had no reason now to run any more
such hazards.
But while these thoughts ran
round in my head, which was the work but of a few moments, I observed my
landlord took him aside and whispered to him, though not very softly neither,
for so much I overheard: ‘Sir, if you shall have occasion—’ the
rest I could not hear, but it seems it was to this purpose: ‘Sir, if
you shall have occasion for a minister, I have a friend a little way off
that will serve you, and be as private as you please.’ My gentleman
answered loud enough for me to hear, ‘Very well, I believe I shall.’
I was no sooner come back to
the inn but he fell upon me with irresistible words, that since he had
had the good fortune to meet me, and everything concurred, it would be
hastening his felicity if I would put an end to the matter just there.
‘What do you mean?’ says I, colouring a little. ‘What, in an inn,
and upon the road! Bless us all,’ said I, as if I had been surprised,
‘how can you talk so?’ ‘Oh, I can talk so very well,’ says he, ‘I
came a-purpose to talk so, and I’ll show you that I did’; and with that
he pulls out a great bundle of papers. ‘You fright me,’ said I;
‘what are all these?’ ‘Don’t be frighted, my dear,’ said he, and
kissed me. This was the first time that he had been so free to call
me ‘my dear’; then he repeated it, ‘Don’t be frighted; you shall see
what it is all’; then he laid them all abroad. There was first the deed
or sentence of divorce from his wife, and the full evidence of her playing
the whore; then there were the certificates of the minister and Church-wardens
of the parish where she lived, proving that she was buried, and intimating
the manner of her death; the copy of the coroner’s warrant for a jury to
sit upon her, and the verdict of the jury, who brought it in Non Compos
Mentis. All this was indeed to the purpose, and to give me satisfaction,
though, by the way, I was not so scrupulous, had he known all, but that
I might have taken him without it. However, I looked them all over as well
as I could, and told him that this was all very clear indeed, but that
he need not have given himself the trouble to have brought them out with
him, for it was time enough. Well, he said, it might be time enough for
me, but no time but the present time was time enough for him.
