第 27 节
作者:敏儿不觉      更新:2021-02-24 22:58      字数:9321
  bellman said; urging her to take it to heart。        Sarah said she did; and threw
  the bellman down a shilling with which to buy himself a pint of wine。
  Sarah; as we have seen; was denied the honour of procession to Tyburn。
  Her sentence was that she was to be hanged in Fleet Street; opposite the
  Mitre    Court;    on   the  7th   of  March;     1733。    And     hanged     she   was
  accordingly。     She fainted in the tumbril; and took some time to recover。
  Her    last  words   were   exemplary   in    their  piety;  but  in  the  face  of  her
  vindictive lying; unretracted to the last; it were hardly exemplary to repeat
  them。
  She was buried in the churchyard of St Sepulchre's。
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  V: ALMOST A LADY'27'
  '27'  Thanks   to   my   friend   Billy   Bennett;   of   music…hall   fame;   for   his
  hint for the chapter title。
  Born   (probably   illegitimately)   in   a   fisherman's   cottage;   reared   in   a
  workhouse; employed in a brothel; won at cards by a royal duke; mistress
  of that duke; married to a baron; received at Court by three kings (though
  not much in the way of kings); accused of cozenage and tacitly of murder;
  died full of piety; ‘cutting up' for close on L150;000there; as it were in a
  nutshell; you have the life of Sophie Dawes; Baronne de Feucheres。
  In the   introduction to   her exhaustive   and accomplished   biography  of
  Sophie   Dawes;'28'   from   which   a   part   of   the   matter   for   this   resume   is
  drawn;   Mme   Violette   Montagu;   speaking   of   the   period   in   which   Sophie
  lived; says that ‘‘Paris; with its fabulous wealth and luxury; seems to have
  been   looked   upon   as   a   sort   of   Mecca   by  handsome   Englishwomen   with
  ambition      and;   what    is  absolutely     necessary     if  they   wish    to  be   really
  successful; plenty of brains。''
  '28' Sophie Dawes; Queen of Chantilly (John Lane; 1912)。
  It   is  because     Sophie    had    plenty   of   brains    of  a  sort;   besides    the
  attributes of good looks; health; and by much a disproportionate share of
  determination;   and   because;   with   all   that   she   attained   to;   she   died   quite
  ostracized by the people with whom it had been her life's ambition to mix;
  and   was   thus   in   a   sense   a   failureit is   because   of   these   things   that   it   is
  worth   while   going   into   details   of   her   career;   expanding   the   precis   with
  which this chapter begins。
  Among the women selected as subjects for this book Sophie Dawes as
  a personality wins ‘hands down。'              Whether she was a criminal or not is a
  question   even   now   in   dispute。       Unscrupulous   she   certainly   was;   and   a
  good deal of a rogue。         That modern American product the ‘gold…digger' is
  what   she   herself   would   call   a   ‘piker'   compared   with   the   subject   of   this
  chapter。     The     blonde    bombshell;      with    her  ‘sugar    daddy;'    her  alimony
  ‘racket;' and the hundred hard…boiled dodges wherewith she chisels money
  and goods from her prey; is; again in her own crude phraseology; ‘knocked
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  for a row of ash…cans' by Sophie Dawes。                As; I think; you will presently
  see。
  Sophie was born   at St   Helens;  Isle of Wightaccording to herself   in
  1792。      There is controversy on the matter。            Mme Montagu in her book
  says that some of Sophie's biographers put the date at 1790; or even 1785。
  But   Mme   Montagu   herself   reproduces   the   list   of   wearing   apparel   with
  which   Sophie   was   furnished   when   she   left   the   ‘house   of   industry'   (the
  workhouse)。         It  is   dated   1805。     In    those    days   children     were    not
  maintained   in   poor   institutions   to   the   mature   ages   of   fifteen   or   twenty。
  They were supposed to be armed against life's troubles at twelve or even
  younger。      Sophie; then; could hardly have been born before 1792; but is
  quite likely to have been born later。
  The name of Sophie's father is given as ‘‘Daw。''                Like many another
  celebrity; as; for example; Walter Raleigh and Shakespeare; Sophie spelled
  her name   variously; though   ultimately  she fixed   on   ‘‘Dawes。''            Richard;
  or Dickey; Daw was a fisherman for appearance sake and a smuggler for
  preference。      The question of Sophie's legitimacy anses from the fact that
  her    mother;    Jane   Callaway;     was    registered    at  death    as  ‘‘a  spinster。''
  Sophie was one of ten children。             Dickey Daw drank his family into the
  poorhouse;   an   institution   which   sent   Sophie   to   fend   for   herself   in   1805;
  procuring her a place as servant at a farm on the island。
  Service on a farm does not appear to have appealed to Sophie。                      She
  escaped   to   Portsmouth;   where   she   found   a   job   as   hotel   chambermaid。
  Tiring of that; she went to London and became a milliner's assistant。                      A
  little affair we hear; in which a mere water…carrier was an equal participant;
  lost Sophie her place。         We next have word of her imitating Nell Gwynn;
  both   in   selling   oranges   to   playgoers   and   in   becoming      an   actressnot;
  however;   at   Old   Drury;   but   at   the   other   patent   theatre;   Covent   Garden。
  Save   that   as   a   comedian   she   never   took   London   by   storm;   and   that   she
  lacked Nell's unfailing good humour; Sophie in her career matches Nell in
  more than superficial particulars。          Between selling oranges and appearing
  on the stage Sophie seems to have touched bottom for a time in poverty。
  But her charms as an actress captivated an officer by and by; and she was
  established as his mistress in a house at Turnham Green。                    Tiring of her
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  after    a  timeSophie;     it  is  probable;    became     exigeant    with   increased
  comforther protector left her with an annuity of L50。
  The  annuity  does   not   appear   to   have   done   Sophie   much   good。       We
  next hear of her as servant…maid in a Piccadilly brothel; a lupanar much
  patronized   by   wealthy   emigres   from   France;   among   whom   was   Louis…
  Henri…Joseph; Duc de Bourbon and later Prince de Conde; a man at that
  time of about fifty…four。
  The   Duc's   attention   was   directed   to   the   good   looks   of   Sophie   by   a
  manservant of his。        Mme Montagu says of Sophie at this time that ‘‘her
  face had already lost the first bloom of youth and innocence。''                 Now; one
  wonders if that really was so; or if Mme Montagu is making a shot at a
  hazard。     She describes Sophie a little earlier than this as having
  developed into a fine young woman; not exactly pretty or handsome;
  but she held her head gracefully; and her regular features were illumined
  by  a   pair   of   remarkably  bright   and    intelligent   eyes。   She   was   tall   and
  squarely built; with legs and arms which might have served as models for
  a   statue   of   Hercules。   Her   muscular   force   was   extraordinary。      Her   lips
  were rather thin; and she had an ugly habit of contracting them when she
  was angry。      Her intelligence was above the average; and she had a good
  share of wit。
  At   the   time   when    the   Duc    de  Bourbon      came    upon    her   in  the
  Piccadilly stew the girl was probably no more than eighteen。                  If one may
  judge her character from the events of her subsequent career there was an
  outstanding resiliency and a resoluteness as main ingredients of her make…
  up; qualities which would go a long way to obviating any marks that might
  otherwise have been left on her by the ups and downs of a mere five years
  in the world。      If; moreover; Mme Montagu's description of her is a true
  one it is clear that Sophie's good looks were not of the sort to make an all…
  round appeal。       The ways in which attractiveness goes; both in men and in
  women; are infinite in their variety。         The reader may recall; in this respect;
  what   was   said   in   the   introductory   chapter   about   Kate   Webster   and   the
  instance   of   the   bewhiskered   'Fina   of   the   Spanish   tavern。    And   since   a
  look of innocence and the bloom of youth may; and very often do; appear
  on the faces of individuals who are far from being innocent or even young;