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Clarissa, Volume 6 - The History Of A Young Lady

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<strong>Clarissa</strong>, <strong>Volume</strong> 6 − <strong>The</strong> <strong>History</strong> <strong>Of</strong> A <strong>Young</strong> <strong>Lady</strong> 32<br />

such a bill to be thrown out.−−For here is the excellency of the scheme: the women will have equal reason<br />

with the men to be pleased with it.<br />

Dost think, that old prerogative Harlowe, for example, must not, if such a law were in being, have pulled in<br />

his horns?−−So excellent a wife as he has, would never else have renewed with such a gloomy tyrant: who, as<br />

well as all other married tyrants, must have been upon good behaviour from year to year.<br />

A termagant wife, if such a law were to pass, would be a phoenix.<br />

<strong>The</strong> churches would be the only market−place for the fair sex; and domestic excellence the capital<br />

recommendation.<br />

Nor would there be an old maid in Great Britain, and all its territories. For what an odd soul must she be who<br />

could not have her twelvemonth's trial?<br />

In short, a total alteration for the better, in the morals and way of life in both sexes, must, in a very few years,<br />

be the consequence of such a salutary law.<br />

Who would have expected such a one from me! I wish the devil owe me not a spite for it.<br />

<strong>The</strong> would not the distinction be very pretty, Jack? as in flowers;−−such a gentleman, or such a lady, is an<br />

ANNUAL−−such a one is a PERENNIAL.<br />

One difficulty, however, as I remember, occurred to me, upon the probability that a wife might be enceinte, as<br />

the lawyers call it. But thus I obviated it−−<br />

That no man should be allowed to marry another woman without his then wife's consent, till she were<br />

brought−to−bed, and he had defrayed all incident charges; and till it was agreed upon between them whether<br />

the child should be his, her's, or the public's. <strong>The</strong> women in this case to have what I call the coercive option;<br />

for I would not have it in the man's power to be a dog neither.<br />

And, indeed, I gave the turn of the scale in every part of my scheme in the women's favour: for dearly do I<br />

love the sweet rogues.<br />

How infinitely more preferable this my scheme to the polygamy one of the old patriarchs; who had wives and<br />

concubines without number!−−I believe David and Solomon had their hundreds at a time. Had they not, Jack?<br />

Let me add, that annual parliaments, and annual marriages, are the projects next my heart. How could I<br />

expatiate upon the benefits that would arise from both!<br />

LETTER X<br />

MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ.<br />

Well, but now my plots thicken; and my employment of writing to thee on this subject will soon come to a<br />

conclusion. For now, having got the license; and Mrs. Townsend with her tars, being to come to Hampstead<br />

next Wednesday or Thursday; and another letter possibly, or message from Miss Howe, to inquire how Miss<br />

Harlowe does, upon the rustic's report of her ill health, and to express her wonder that she has not heard form<br />

her in answer to her's on her escape; I must soon blow up the lady, or be blown up myself. And so I am<br />

preparing, with <strong>Lady</strong> Betty and my cousin Montague, to wait upon my beloved with a coach−and−four, or a<br />

sett; for <strong>Lady</strong> Betty will not stir out with a pair for the world; though but for two or three miles. And this is a<br />

well−known part of her character.

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