<h2>CHAPTER XV.</h2>
<p>If the dean had loved his wife but moderately, seeing all her
faults clearly as he did, he must frequently have quarrelled with
her: if he had loved her with tenderness, he must have treated
her with a degree of violence in the hope of amending her
failings. But having neither personal nor mental affection
towards her sufficiently interesting to give himself the trouble
to contradict her will in anything, he passed for one of the best
husbands in the world. Lady Clementina went out when she
liked, stayed at home when she liked, dressed as she liked, and
talked as she liked without a word of disapprobation from her
husband, and all—because he cared nothing about her.</p>
<p>Her vanity attributed this indulgence to inordinate affection;
and observers in general thought her happier in her marriage than
the beloved wife who bathes her pillow with tears by the side of
an angry husband, whose affection is so excessive that he
unkindly upbraids her because she is—less than
perfection.</p>
<p>The dean’s wife was not so dispassionately considered by
some of his acquaintance as by himself; for they would now and
then hint at her foibles: but this great liberty she also
conceived to be the effect of most violent love, or most violent
admiration: and such would have been her construction had they
commended her follies—had they totally slighted, or had
they beaten her.</p>
<p>Amongst those acquaintances, the aforesaid bishop, by far the
most frequent visitor, did not come merely to lounge an idle
hour, but he had a more powerful motive; the desire of fame, and
dread of being thought a man receiving large emolument for
unimportant service.</p>
<p>The dean, if he did not procure him the renown he wished,
still preserved him from the apprehended censure.</p>
<p>The elder William was to his negligent or ignorant superiors
in the church such as an apt boy at school is to the rich
dunces—William performed the prelates’ tasks for
them, and they rewarded him—not indeed with toys or money,
but with their countenance, their company, their praise.
And scarcely was there a sermon preached from the patrician part
of the bench, in which the dean did not fashion some periods,
blot out some uncouth phrases, render some obscure sentiments
intelligible, and was the certain person, when the work was
printed, to correct the press.</p>
<p>This honourable and right reverend bishop delighted in
printing and publishing his works; or rather the entire works of
the dean, which passed for his: and so degradingly did William,
the shopkeeper’s son, think of his own homiest extraction,
that he was blinded, even to the loss of honour, by the lustre of
this noble acquaintance; for, though in other respects he was a
man of integrity, yet, when the gratification of his friend was
in question, he was a liar; he not only disowned his giving him
aid in any of his publications, but he never published anything
in his own name without declaring to the world “that he had
been obliged for several hints on the subject, for many of the
most judicious corrections, and for those passages in page so and
so (naming the most eloquent parts of the work) to his noble and
learned friend the bishop.”</p>
<p>The dean’s wife being a fine lady—while her
husband and his friend pored over books or their own manuscripts
at home, she ran from house to house, from public amusement to
public amusement; but much less for the pleasure of <i>seeing</i>
than for that of being seen. Nor was it material to her
enjoyment whether she were observed, or welcomed, where she went,
as she never entertained the smallest doubt of either; but rested
assured that her presence roused curiosity and dispensed gladness
all around.</p>
<p>One morning she went forth to pay her visits, all smiles, such
as she thought captivating: she returned, all tears, such as she
thought no less endearing.</p>
<p>Three ladies accompanied her home, entreating her to be
patient under a misfortune to which even kings are liable:
namely, defamation.</p>
<p>Young Henry, struck with compassion at grief of which he knew
not the cause, begged to know “what was the
matter?”</p>
<p>“Inhuman monsters, to treat a woman thus!” cried
his aunt in a fury, casting the corner of her eye into a
looking-glass, to see how rage became her.</p>
<p>“But, comfort yourself,” said one of her
companions: “few people will believe you merit the
charge.”</p>
<p>“But few! if only one believe it, I shall call my
reputation lost, and I will shut myself up in some lonely hut,
and for ever renounce all that is dear to me!”</p>
<p>“What! all your fine clothes?” said Henry, in
amazement.</p>
<p>“Of what importance will my best dresses be, when nobody
would see them?”</p>
<p>“You would see them yourself, dear aunt; and I am sure
nobody admires them more.”</p>
<p>“Now you speak of that,” said she, “I do not
think this gown I have on becoming—I am sure I
look—”</p>
<p>The dean, with the bishop (to whom he had been reading a
treatise just going to the press, which was to be published in
the name of the latter, though written by the former), now
entered, to inquire why they had been sent for in such haste.</p>
<p>“Oh, Dean! oh, my Lord Bishop!” she cried,
resuming that grief which the thoughts of her dress had for a
time dispelled—“My reputation is destroyed—a
public print has accused me of playing deep at my own house, and
winning all the money.”</p>
<p>“The world will never reform,” said the bishop:
“all our labour, my friend, is thrown away.”</p>
<p>“But is it possible,” cried the dean, “that
any one has dared to say this of you?”</p>
<p>“Here it is in print,” said she, holding out a
newspaper.</p>
<p>The dean read the paragraph, and then exclaimed, “I can
forgive a falsehood <i>spoken</i>—the warmth of
conversation may excuse it—but to <i>write</i> and
<i>print</i> an untruth is unpardonable, and I will prosecute
this publisher.”</p>
<p>“Still the falsehood will go down to posterity,”
said Lady Clementina; “and after ages will think I was a
gambler.”</p>
<p>“Comfort yourself, dear madam,” said young Henry,
wishing to console her: “perhaps after ages may not hear of
you; nor even the present age think much about you.”</p>
<p>The bishop now exclaimed, after having taken the paper from
the dean, and read the paragraph, “It is a libel, a rank
libel, and the author must be punished.”</p>
<p>“Not only the author, but the publisher,” said the
dean.</p>
<p>“Not only the publisher, but the printer,”
continued the bishop.</p>
<p>“And must my name be bandied about by lawyers in a
common court of justice?” cried Lady Clementina.
“How shocking to my delicacy!”</p>
<p>“My lord, it is a pity we cannot try them by the
ecclesiastical court,” said the dean, with a sigh.</p>
<p>“Or by the India delinquent bill,” said the
bishop, with vexation.</p>
<p>“So totally innocent as I am!” she vociferated
with sobs. “Every one knows I never touch a card at
home, and this libel charges me with playing at my own house; and
though, whenever I do play, I own I am apt to win, yet it is
merely for my amusement.”</p>
<p>“Win or not win, play or not play,” exclaimed both
the churchmen, “this is a libel—no doubt, no doubt, a
libel.”</p>
<p>Poor Henry’s confined knowledge of his native language
tormented him so much with curiosity upon this occasion, that he
went softly up to his uncle, and asked him in a whisper,
“What is the meaning of the word libel?”</p>
<p>“A libel,” replied the dean, in a raised voice,
“is that which one person publishes to the injury of
another.”</p>
<p>“And what can the injured person do,” asked Henry,
“if the accusation should chance to be true?”</p>
<p>“Prosecute,” replied the dean.</p>
<p>“But, then, what does he do if the accusation be
false?”</p>
<p>“Prosecute likewise,” answered the dean.</p>
<p>“How, uncle! is it possible that the innocent behave
just like the guilty?”</p>
<p>“There is no other way to act.”</p>
<p>“Why, then, if I were the innocent, I would do nothing
at all sooner than I would act like the guilty. I would not
persecute—”</p>
<p>“I said <i>prosecute</i>,” cried the dean in
anger. “Leave the room; you have no
comprehension.”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes, now I understand the difference of the two
words; but they sound so much alike, I did not at first observe
the distinction. You said, ‘the innocent prosecute,
but the <i>guilty persecute</i>.’” He bowed
(convinced as he thought) and left the room.</p>
<p>After this modern star-chamber, which was left sitting, had
agreed on its mode of vengeance, and the writer of the libel was
made acquainted with his danger, he waited, in all humility, upon
Lady Clementina, and assured her, with every appearance of
sincerity,</p>
<p>“That she was not the person alluded to by the paragraph
in question, but that the initials which she had conceived to
mark out her name, were, in fact, meant to point out Lady
Catherine Newland.”</p>
<p>“But, sir,” cried Lady Clementina, “what
could induce you to write such a paragraph upon Lady
Catherine? She <i>never</i> plays.”</p>
<p>“We know that, madam, or we dared not to have attacked
her. Though we must circulate libels, madam, to gratify our
numerous readers, yet no people are more in fear of prosecutions
than authors and editors; therefore, unless we are deceived in
our information, we always take care to libel the
innocent—we apprehend nothing from them—their own
characters support them—but the guilty are very tenacious;
and what they cannot secure by fair means, they will employ force
to accomplish. Dear madam, be assured I have too much
regard for a wife and seven small children, who are maintained by
my industry alone, to have written anything in the nature of a
libel upon your ladyship.”</p>
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