“Charity,” cried the woman impatiently interrupting her, “charity indeed: why, Mistress, charity begins at home, and I have seven children at home, honest, lawful children, and it is my duty to keep them; and do you think I will give away my property to a nasty, impudent hussey, to maintain her and her bastard; an I was saying to my husband the other day what will this world come to; honest women are nothing now-a-days, while the harlotings are set up for fine ladies, and look upon us no more nor the dirt they walk upon: but let me tell you, my fine spoken Ma’am, I must have my money; so seeing as how you can’t pay it, why you must troop, and leave all your fine gimcracks and fal der ralls behind you. I don’t ask for no more nor my right, and nobody shall dare for to go for to hinder me of it.”
“Oh heavens,” cried Charlotte, clasping her hands, “what will become of me?”
“Come on ye!” retorted the unfeeling wretch: “why go to the barracks and work for a morsel of bread; wash and mend the soldiers cloaths, an cook their victuals, and not expect to live in idleness on honest people’s means. Oh I wish I could see the day when all such cattle were obliged to work hard and eat little; it’s only what they deserve.”
“Father of mercy,” cried Charlotte, “I acknowledge thy correction just; but prepare me, I beseech thee, for the portion of misery thou may’st please to lay upon me.”
“Well,” said the woman, “I shall go an tell my husband as how you can’t pay; and so d’ye see, Ma’am, get ready to be packing away this very night, for you should not stay another night in this house, though I was sure you would lay in the street.”
Charlotte bowed her head in silence; but the anguish of her heart was too great to permit her to articulate a single word.
CHAPTER XXX.
And what is friendship
but a name,
A charm that lulls to sleep,
A shade that follows wealth and
fame,
But leaves the wretch to weep.
When Charlotte was left to herself, she began to think
what course she must take, or to whom she could apply,
to prevent her perishing for want, or perhaps that
very night falling a victim to the inclemency of the
season. After many perplexed thoughts, she at
last determined to set out for New-York, and enquire
out Mrs. Crayton, from whom she had no doubt but she
should obtain immediate relief as soon as her distress
was made known; she had no sooner formed this resolution
than she resolved immediately to put it in execution:
she therefore wrote the following little billet to
Mrs. Crayton, thinking if she should have company with
her it would be better to send it in than to request
to see her.
To Mrs. Crayton.
“Madam,