_Sir C._ Miss Alscrip, your--
[_As he is beginning to say your humble Servant,_
_Enter BLANDISH out of Breath._
_Blandish._ The duel"s over.
_Sir C._ And the parties unhurt--You are too late in your intelligence by some minutes. But I know you must rejoice [_Ironically._] from your attachment to all parties.--Miss Alscrip, your very--
_Miss Als._ Duel!--Pray let us hear the particulars--As there is no mischief, I shall not faint.
[_Ironically._
_Sir C._ I guess it has been of the common-place kind.--Hats over the brows--glum silence--thrust--parry--and riposte----Explain and shake hands: Your man of honour never sets his friend right, till he has exchanged a shot--or a thrust: Oh, a little steel recipe is a morning whet to the temper: It carries off all qualms, and leaves the digestion free for any thing that is presented to it.
_Miss Als._ Dear, how fortunate! Considering the pills some folks have to swallow.
_Sir C._ Blandish, see if the door of Clifford"s room is yet unlocked, there is a person within you little expect to find, and whom it may be proper for this lady and me to interrogate together.
[_The Door opens, and_
_Enter LADY EMILY._
_Blandish._ Lady Emily!
_Sir C._ Inexplicable, with a vengeance.
_Miss Als._ [_Aside._] Lady Emily, shut up in Clifford"s apartment!
Beyond my expectation, indeed.
[_With a malicious Air._
[_LADY EMILY seems pleased._
_Sir C._ [_Dryly._] Lady Emily, I know you were always cautious whom you visited, and never gave a better proof of your discernment.
_Lady E._ Never. Oh! my poor dear uncle, you little think what is going to befall you.
_Sir C._ Not a disappointment in love, I hope.
_Lady E._ No, but in something much nearer your heart--your system is threatened with a blow, that I think, and from my soul I hope, it never will recover: would you guess that the sagacious observations of your whole life are upon the point of being confounded by the production--
_Sir C._ Of what?
_Lady E._ A woman of ingenuous discretion, and a man of unaffected integrity.
_Sir C._ Hah!
_Mrs. Blandish._ What can she mean?
_Miss Als._ Nothing good--she looks so pleasant.
_Lady E._ Come forth, my injured friend. Our personal acquaintance has been short, but our hearts were intimate from the first sight.
[_Presenting her._] Your prisoner, sir, is Miss Harriet Clifford.
_Sir C._ Clifford"s sister!
_Miss Als._ What, the run-away Alton, turned into a sprig of quality.
_Lady E._ [_Disdainfully to MISS ALSCRIP._] The humble dependent of Alscrip house--The wanton--the paragon of fraud--the only female that can equal Clifford. [_Tauntingly to SIR CLEMENT._] She is indeed!
[_With Emphasis and Affection._
_Blandish._ [_Aside._] Oh, rot the source of the family fondness--I see I have no card left in my favour--but the heiress. [_Goes to her and pays Court--During this Conversation, aside, LADY EMILY seems encouraging MISS CLIFFORD.--SIR CLEMENT musing, and by Turns examining her._]
_Sir C._ [_To himself._] "Ingenuous discretion!"
_Enter CLIFFORD, and runs to his Sister._
_Cliff._ My dearest Harriet! the joy I purposed in presenting you here, is antic.i.p.ated: but, my blameless fugitive! when your story is known, my pride in you will not be a wonder.--Miss Clifford, behold your persecutor and your convert.
_Enter LORD GAYVILLE._
_Lord G._ [_With Rapture._] Her persecutor and her convert. Her virtues, which no humility could conceal, and every trial made more resplendent, discovered, disgraced, and reclaimed a libertine.--
_Miss Cliff._ How am I distressed!--what ought I to answer?
_Lord G._ Impressed sentiment upon desire, gave honour to pa.s.sion, and drew from my soul a vow, which Heaven chastise me when I violate, to obtain her by a legal, sacred claim, or renounce fortune, family and friends, and become a self-devoted outcast of the world.
_Miss Cliff._ Oh! brother, interpose.
_Sir C._ My lord, your fortune, family and friends are much obliged to you. Your part is perfect--Mr. Clifford, you are called upon. Miss, in strict propriety, throws the business upon her relations--Come, finish the comedy, join one of her hands to the gallant"s, while, with the other, she covers her blushes--and he in rapture delivers the moral.
All for Love, or, the World well lost.
[_MISS CLIFFORD still appears agitated._
_Cliff._ Be patient, my Harriet, this is the school for prejudice, and the lesson of its shame is near.
_Miss Als._ I vow these singular circ.u.mstances give me quite a confusion of pleasure. The astonishing good fortune of my late protegee, in finding so impa.s.sioned a friendship in her brother"s bed-chamber; the captivating eloquence of Lord Gayville, in winding up an eclairciss.e.m.e.nt which I admire--not for the first time--to-day--and the superlative joy Sir Clement must feel at an union, founded upon the purity of the pa.s.sions,--are subjects of such different congratulation, that I hardly know where to begin.
_Lady E._ [_Aside_] Charming! her insolence will justify what so seldom occurs to one--a severe retort, without a possible sense of compunction.
_Miss Als._ But in point of fortune--don"t imagine, Sir Clement, I would insinuate that the lady is dest.i.tute--oh Lord, far from it. Her musical talents are a portion--
_ALSCRIP and RIGHTLY without._
_Alscrip._ Why, stop a moment--