A Set of Rogues eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 361 pages of information about A Set of Rogues.

A Set of Rogues eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 361 pages of information about A Set of Rogues.

“No, Kit,” says he, very resolutely, “I’ll not.  I am resolved I won’t go there till to-morrow, for this is no hour to be a-calling on ladies, and her husband being away ’twill look as if we had ordered it of purpose.  Besides, if Moll’s in trouble, how am I to pretend I know nothing of the matter and care less, and this Mother Butterby and a parcel of sly, observant servants about to surprise one at any moment?  Say no more—­’tis useless—­for I won’t be persuaded against my judgment.”

“As you will,” says I.

“There’s another reason, if other’s needed,” says he, “and that’s this plaguey thirst of mine, which seizes me when I’m doleful or joyful, with a force there’s no resisting.  And chiefly it seizes me in the later part of the day; therefore, I’d have you take me to the Court to-morrow morning betimes, ere it’s at its worst.  My throat’s like any limekiln for dryness now; so do pray, Kit, fasten the door snug, and give me a mug of ale.”

This ended our discussion; but, as it was necessary I should give some reason for not supping with Moll, I left Dawson with a bottle, and went up to the house to find Moll.  There I learnt that she was still in her chamber, and sleeping, as Mrs. Butterby believed; so I bade the good woman tell her mistress when she awoke that Captain Evans had come to spend the night with me, and he would call to pay her his devoirs the next morning.

Here, that nothing may be unaccounted for in the sequence of events, I must depart from my train of present observation to speak from after-knowledge.

I have said that when Moll started forward, as if to overtake her husband, she suddenly stopped as if confronted by some menacing spectre.  And this indeed was the case; for at that moment there appeared to her heated imagination (for no living soul was there) a little, bent old woman, clothed in a single white garment of Moorish fashion, and Moll knew that she was Mrs. Godwin (though seeing her now for the first time), come from Barbary to claim her own, and separate Moll from the husband she had won by fraud.

She stood there (says Moll) within her gates, with raised hand and a most bitter, unforgiving look upon her wasted face, barring the way by which Moll might regain her husband; and as the poor wife halted, trembling in dreadful awe, the old woman advanced with the sure foot of right and justice.  What reproach she had to make, what malediction to pronounce, Moll dared not stay to hear, but turning her back fled to the house, where, gaining her chamber, she locked the door, and flung herself upon her husband’s bed; and in this last dear refuge, shutting her eyes, clasping her ears, as if by dulling her senses to escape the phantom, she lay in a convulsion of terror for the mere dread that such a thing might be.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
A Set of Rogues from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.