“Do as you please, my dear; but remember I cannot
afford to lay out of my money to all eternity.
The account between us has run up to a great sum;
the dresses were such as never were made up before
in York, and must be paid for accordingly, as you
must be sensible, Miss Barton. And when you have
an opportunity of establishing yourself so handsomely,
and getting all your debts paid; and when your brother,
who was here an hour ago, presses the match with Mr.
Marvel so much; it is very strange and unaccountable
of you to say, ’you will take nobody’s
advice but your own;’ and to fall in love, ma’am,
as you are doing, as fast as you can, with a person
who has no serious intentions, and is going to be married
to another woman. For shame, Miss Barton; is this
behaving with proper propriety? Besides, I’ve
really great regard for that poor young man that you
have been making a fool of; I’m sure he is desperately
in love with you.”
“Then let him show it, and sell Clover-hill,”
said Miss Barton.
Her mind balanced between avarice and what she called
love. She had taken a fancy to Wright, and his
present coldness rather increased than diminished
her passion: he played his part so well, that
she could not tell how to decide. In the mean
time, the milliner pressed for her money; and Alicia’s
brother bullied loudly in favour of Marvel: he
had engaged the milliner, whom he was courting, to
support his opinion. Marvel, though with much
difficulty, stood his ground, and refused to sell
Clover-hill, till he should be perfectly sure that
Miss Barton would marry him, and till his relation
should arrive in town, and give his consent.
Mr. Barton and the milliner now agreed, that if fair
means would not bring the charming Alicia to reason,
others must be used; and it was settled that she should
be arrested for her debt to the milliner, which was
upwards of fifty pounds. “She knows,”
said this considerate brother, “that I have
neither the power nor the will to pay the money.
Sir Plantagenet’s son is as poor as Job; so
she must have recourse to Marvel; and, if she gives
him proper encouragement, he’ll pay the money
in a trice. As to this man, who lodges with you,
let her apply to him if she likes it; she will soon
see how he will answer her. By your account he
is a shrewd fellow, and not like our friend Marvel.”
On Friday morning the charming Alicia was arrested,
at the suit of her dear friend and confidant, the
milliner. The arrest was made in the milliner’s
shop. Alicia would doubtless have screamed and
fainted, with every becoming spirit and grace, if
any spectators had been present: but there was
no one in the shop to admire or pity. She rushed
with dishevelled hair, and all the stage show of distraction,
into Wright’s apartment; but, alas! he was not
to be found. She then composed herself, and wrote
the following note to Marvel: