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should there be accessaries in ravishment any more than murder? Why should not every contributor to the abuse of chastity suffer death? I am sure these shameless hell-hounds deserved it highly. Can you exert yourself better than on such an occasion. If you do not do it effectually, I'll read no more of your papers. Has every impertinent fellow a privilege to torment me, who pay my coach-hire as well as he? Sir, pray consider us in this respect as the weakest sex, and having nothing to defend ourselves: and Í think it as gentleman-like to challenge a woman to fight, as to talk obscenely in her company, especially when she has no power to stir. Pray let me tell you a story, which you can make fit for public view. I knew a gentleman, who having a very good opinion of the gentlemen of the army, invited ten or twelve of them to sup with him; and at the same time invited two or three friends, who were very severe against the manners and morals of gentlemen of that profession. It happened one of them brought two captains of his regiment newly come into the army, who, at first onset engaged the company with very lewd healths, and suitable discourse. You may easily imagine the confusion of the entertainer, who finding some of his friends very uneasy, desired to tell them a story of a great man, one Mr. Locke (whom I find you frequently mention,) that being invited to dine with the then Lords Halifax, Anglesey, and Shaftsbury, immediately after dinner, instead of conversation, the cards were called for, where the bad or good success produced the usual passions of gaming. Mr. Locke retiring to a window,

and writing, my Lord Anglesey desired to know what he was writing: "Why, my lords," answered he, "I could not sleep last night for the pleasure and improvement I expected from the conversation of the greatest men of the age.' This so sensibly stung them, that they gladly compounded to throw their cards into the fire if he would his paper, and so a conversation ensued fit for such persons. This story pressed so hard upon the young captains, together with the concurrence of their superior officers, that the young fellows left the company in confusion. Sir, I know you hate long things, but if you like it, you may contract it, or how you will; but I think it has a moral in it.

‹ But, sir, I am told you are a famous mechanic, as well as a looker-on; and therefore humbly propose you would invent some padlock, with full power under your hand and seal, for all modest persons, either men or women, to clap upon the mouths of all such impertinent impudent fellows: and I wish you would publish a proclamation, that no modest person that has a value for her countenance, and consequently would not be put out of it, presume to travel after such a day without one of them in their pockets. I fancy a smart Spectator upon this subject would serve for such a padlock, and that public notice may be given in your paper where they may be had, with directions, price two-pence; and that part of the directions may be, when any person presumes to be guilty of the abovementioned crime, the party aggrieved may produce it to his face, with a request to read it to the company. He must be very much hardened that could out

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'MR. SPECTATOR,

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JUV. SAT.

STEPNEY.

I AM a young woman of nineteen, the only daughter of very wealthy parents, and have my whole life been used with a tenderness which did me no great service in my education. I have perhaps an uncommon desire for knowledge of what is suitable to my sex and quality; but as far as I can remember, the whole dispute about me has been, whether such a thing was proper for the child to do or not? or whether such or such food was the more wholesome for the young lady to eat? This was ill for my shape, that for my complexion, and the other for my eyes. I am not extravagant when I tell you, I do not know that I have trod upon the very earth ever since I was ten years old; a coach or chair I am obliged to for all my motions from one place to another, ever since I can remember. All who had to do to instruct me, have ever been bringing stories of the notable things I have said, and the wo

manly manner of my behaving myself upon such and such an occasion. This has been my state till I came towards years of womanhood; and ever since I grew towards the age of fifteen, I have been abused after another manner. Now, forsooth, I am so killing, no one can safely speak to me. Our house is frequented by men of sense, and I love to ask questions when I fall into such conversation; but I am cut short with something or other about my bright eyes. There is, sir, a language particular for talking to women in; and none but those of the very first good-breeding (who are very few and who seldom come into my way,) can speak to us without regard to our sex. Among the generality of those they call gentlemen, it is impossible for me to speak upon any subject whatsoever, without provoking somebody to say, "Oh! to be sure, fine Mrs. Such-aone must be very particularly acquainted with all that; all the world would contribute to her entertainment and information." Thus, sir, I am so handsome, that I murder all who approach me; so wise, that I want no new notice; and so well-bred, that I am treated by all that know me like a fool, for no one will answer as if I were their friend or companion. Pray, sir, be pleased to take the part of us beauties and fortunes into your consideration, and do not let us be thus flattered out of our senses. I have got a hussy of a maid who is most craftily given to this ill quality. I was at first diverted with a certain absurdity the creature was guilty of in every thing she said; she is a country girl, and in the dialect of the shire she was born in, would tell me, that every body reckoned her lady had the purest red

VOL. XI.-2

and white in the world; then she would tell me I was the most like one Sisly Dobson in their town; who made the miller make way with himself, and walk afterwards in the cornfield where they used to meet. With all this, the cunning hussy can lay letters in my way, and put a billet in my glove, and then stand in it she knows nothing of it. I do not know from my birth to this day, that I have been ever treated by any one as I ought; and if it were not for a few books which I delight in, I should be at this hour a novice to all common sense. Would it not be worth your while to lay down rules for behaviour in this case, and tell people, that we fair ones expect honest plain answers as well as other people? Why must I, good sir, because I have a good air, a fine complexion, and am in the bloom of my years, be misled in all my actions; and have the notions of good and ill confounded in my mind, for no other offence, but because I have the advantages of beauty and fortune? Indeed, sir, what with the silly homage which is paid to us by the sort of people I have above spoken of, and the utter negligence which others have for us, the conversation of us young women of condition is no other than what must expose us to ignorance and vanity, if not vice. All this is humbly submitted to your Spectatorial wisdom, by sir, your most humble servant,

MR. SPECTATOR,

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Will's Coffee-house.

Pray, sir, it will serve to fill up a paper if you put in this; which is only to ask, whether that copy of verses, which is a paraphrase of Isaiah,

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