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is not easy to blame, and which it is impoffible to alter, a woman lofes with her chastity the chance of marrying at all, or in any manner equal to the hopes the had been accustomed to entertain. Now marriage, whatever it be to a man, is that, from which every woman expects her chief happiness. And this is still more true in low life, of which condition the women are, who are most exposed to folicitations of this fort. Add to this, that where a woman's maintenance depends upon her character, as it does, in a great measure, with those who are to support themselves by fervice, little fometimes is left to the forfaken fufferer, but to ftarve for want of employment, or to have recourse to prostitution for food and raiment.

As a woman collects her virtue into this point, the loss of her chastity is generally the destruction of her moral principle; and this confequence is to be apprehended, whether the criminal intercourse be difcovered or not.

2. The injury to the family may be underftood, by the application of that infallible rule, "of doing to others what we would that others "fhould do unto us.' Let a father, or a brother fay, for what they would fuffer this injury

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in a daughter or a fifter; and whether any, or even a total loss of fortune would create 'equal affliction and distress. And when they reflect upon this, let them diftinguish, if they can, between a robbery committed upon their property by fraud or forgery, and the ruin of their happiness by the treachery of a feducer.

3. The public at large lofe the benefit of the woman's fervice in her proper place and deftination, as a wife and parent. This to the whole community may be little; but it is often more than all the good, which the feducer does to the community, can recompenfe. Moreover, proftitution is fupplied by feduction, and in proportion to the danger there is of the woman's betaking herfelf after her firft facrifice to a life of public lewdnefs, the feducer is answerable for the multiplied evils to which his crime gives birth.

Upon the whole, if we purfue the effects of feduction through the complicated mifery which it occafions; and if it be right to estimate crimes by the mischief they knowingly produce, it will appear fomething more than mere invective to affert, that not one half

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of the crimes, for which men fuffer death by the laws of England, are so flagitious as this.**

*Yet the law has provided no punishment for this offence beyond a pecuniary satisfaction to the injured family; and this can only be come at, by one of the quainteft fictions in the world, by the father's bringing his action against the seducer, for the lofs of his daughter's fervice, during her pregnancy and nurturing.

CHAP.

CHA P. IV.

ADULTERY.

ANEW fufferer is introduced, the injured

husband, who receives a wound in his fenfibility and affections, the most painful and incurable that human nature knows. In all other refpects, adultery on the part of the man who folicits the chastity of a married woman, includes the crime of seduction, and is attended with the fame mischief.

The infidelity of the woman is aggravated by cruelty to her children, who are generally involved in their parents shame, and always made unhappy by their quarrel.

If it be faid that these confequences are chargeable not so much upon the crime, as the discovery, we answer, first, that the crime could not be discovered unless it were committed, and that the commiffion is never fecure from difcovery; and fecondly, that if we allow of adulterous connections, whenever they can hope to escape detection,

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detection, which is the conclufion to which this argument conducts us, we leave the husband no other fecurity for his wife's chastity, than in her want of opportunity or temptation; which would probably either deter men from marrying, or render marriage a ftate of fuch jealoufy and alarm to the hufband, as muft end in the flavery and confinement of the wife.

The vow, by which married perfons mutually engage their fidelity, is "witneffed before "God," and accompanied with circumftances of folemnity and religion, which approach to the nature of an oath. The married offender therefore incurs a crime little fhort of perjury, and the feduction of a married woman is little less than fubornation of perjury :-and this guilt is independent of the discovery.

All behaviour, which is defigned, or which knowingly tends, to captivate the affection of a married woman, is a barbarous intrusion upon peace and virtue of a family, though it fall fhort of adultery.

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The ufual and only apology for adultery is the prior tranfgreffion of the other party. There are degrees no doubt in this, as in other crimes; and fo far as the bad effects of adultery are anticipated by the conduct of the husband or wife

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