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the gaming table-vol. 1-第46章

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only around the Capitol; but even in the remainder of the Empire。



Contemporary authors; who have not spared the Roman ladies; never

reproached them with this vice; which; in modern times; has been

desperately practised by women who in licentiousness vied with

Messalina。



In France; women who wished to gamble were; at first; obliged to

keep the thing secret; for if it became known they lost

caste。  In the reign of Louis XIV。; and still more in that of

Louis XV。; they became bolder; and the wives of the great engaged

in the deepest play in their mansions; but still a gamestress was

always denounced with horror。  ‘Such women;' says La Bruyiere;

‘make us chaste; they have nothing of the sex but its garments。'



By the end of the 18th century; gamestresses became so numerous

that they excited no surprise; especially among the higher

classes; and the majority of them were notorious for unfair play

or downright cheating。  A stranger once betted on the game of a

lady at a gaming…table; who claimed a stake although on a losing

card。  Out of consideration for the distinguished trickstress;

the banker wished to pay the stranger as well; but the latter

with a blush; exclaimed‘Possibly madame won; but as for myself;

I am quite sure that I lost。'



But if women cheated at play; they also frequently lost; and were

often reduced to beggary; or to what is far viler; to sacrifice;

not only their own honour; but that of their daughters。



Gaming sometimes led to other crimes。  The Countess of

Schwiechelt; a young and beautiful lady from Hanover; was much

given to gambling; and lost 50;000 livres at Paris。  In order to

repair this great loss; she planned and executed the robbery of a

fine coronet of emeralds; the property of Madame Demidoff。  She

had made herself acquainted with the place where it was kept; and

at a ball given by its owner the Hanoverian lady contrived to

purloin it。  Her youth and rank in life induced many persons to

solicit her pardon; but Buonaparte left her to the punishment to

which she was condemned。  This occurred in 1804。



In England; too; the practice of gambling was fraught with the

worst consequences to the finest feelings and best qualities of

the sex。  The chief danger is very plainly hinted at in the

comedy of _The Provoked Husband_。





_Lord Townley_。'Tis not your ill hours that always distract me;

but; as often; the ill company that occasions those hours。



_Lady Townley_。Sure I don't understand you now; my lord。  What

ill company do I keep?



_Lord Townley_。Why; at best; women that lose their money; and

men that win it; _or; perhaps; men that are voluntary bubbles at

one game; in hopes a lady will give them fair play at another。_





‘The facts;' says Mr Massey;'98' ‘confirm the theory。

Walpole's Letters and Mr Jesse's volumes on George Selwyn and his

Contemporaries; teem with allusions to proved or understood cases

of matrimonial infidelity; and the manner in which notorious

irregularities were brazened out; shows that the offenders did

not always encounter the universal reprobation of society。





'98' History of England; ii。





‘Whist was not much in vogue until a later period; and was far

too abstruse and slow to suit the depraved taste which required

unadulterated stimulants。'



The ordinary stakes at these mixed assemblies would; at the

present day; be considered high; even at the clubs where a rubber

is still allowed。



‘The consequences of such gaming were often still more lamentable

than those which usually attended such practices。  It would

happen that a lady lost more than she could venture to confess to

her husband or father。  Her creditor was probably a fine

gentleman; or she became indebted to some rich admirer for the

means of discharging her liabilities。  In either event; the

result may be guessed。  In the one case; the debt of honour was

liquidated on the old principle of the law…merchant; according to

which there was but one alternative to payment in purse。  In

the other; there was likewise but one mode in which the

acknowledgment of obligation by a fine woman would be acceptable

to a man of the world。'



‘The pernicious consequences of gambling to the nation at large;'

says another writer; ‘would have been intolerable enough had they

been confined to the stronger sex; but; unfortunately; the women

of the day were equally carried away by this criminal

infatuation。  The disgusting influence of this sordid vice was so

disastrous to female minds; that they lost their fairest

distinction and privileges; together with the blushing honours of

modesty。  Their high gaming was necessarily accompanied with

great losses。  If all their resources; regular and irregular;

honest and fraudulent; were dissipated; still; _GAME…DEBTS MUST

BE PAID!_  The cunning winner was no stranger to the necessities

of the case。  He hinted at _commutations_which were not to be

refused。



〃So tender these;if debts crowd fast upon her;

She'll pawn her _VIRTUE_ to preserve her _HONOUR!_〃





Thus; the last invaluable jewel of female possession was

unavoidably resigned。  That was indeed the forest of all

evils; but an evil to which every deep gamestress was

inevitably exposed。'



Hogarth strikingly illustrated this phase of womanhood in

England; in his small picture painted for the Earl of Charlemont;

and entitled ‘_Picquet; or Virtue in Danger_。'  It shows a young

lady; who; during a _tete…a…tete_; had just lost all her

money to a handsome officer of her own age。  He is represented in

the act of returning her a handful of bank…bills; with the hope

of exchanging them for another acquisition and more delicate

plunder。  On the chimney…piece are a watch…case and a figure of

Time; over it this motto_Nunc_; ‘Now!'  Hogarth has caught his

heroine during this moment of hesitationthis struggle with

herselfand has expressed her feelings with uncommon success。



But; indeed; the thing was perfectly understood。  In the

_Guardian_ (No。 120) we read:‘All play…debts must be paid in

specie or by equivalent。  The 〃man〃 that plays beyond his

income pawns his estate; the 〃woman〃 must find out something

else to mortgage when her pin…money is gone。  The husband has his

lands to dispose of; the wife her person。  Now when the female

body is once dipped; if the creditor be very importunate; I

leave my reader to consider the consequences。' 。 。 。 。



A lady was married when very young to a noble lord; the honour

and ornament of his country; who hoped to preserve her from the

contagion of the times by his own example; and; to say the truth;

she had every good quality that could recommend her to the bosom

of a man of discernment and worth。  But; alas! how frail and

short are the joys of mortals!  One unfortunate hour ruined his

darling visionary scheme of happiness: she was introduced to an

infamous woman; was drawn into play; liked it; and; as the

unavoidable con
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