- Project Gutenberg's Love And Freindship And Other Early Works, by Jane Austen
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
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- Title: Love And Freindship And Other Early Works
- (Love And Friendship) A collection of juvenile writings
- Author: Jane Austen
- Posting Date: August 24, 2008 [EBook #1212]
- Release Date: February, 1998
- Last Updated: March 10, 2018
- Language: English
- Character set encoding: UTF-8
- *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOVE AND FREINDSHIP ***
- LOVE AND FREINDSHIP AND OTHER EARLY WORKS
- (Love And Friendship And Other Early Works)
- A Collection of Juvenile Writings
- By Jane Austen
- Transcriber's Note: A few very small changes have been made to this
- version: Italics have been converted to capitals. The British 'pound'
- symbol has been converted to 'L'; but in general the author's erratic
- spelling, punctuation and capitalisations have been retained.
- CONTENTS.
- Love and Freindship
- Lesley Castle
- The History of England
- Collection of Letters
- Scraps
- LOVE AND FREINDSHIP
- TO MADAME LA COMTESSE DE FEUILLIDE THIS NOVEL
- IS INSCRIBED BY HER
- OBLIGED HUMBLE SERVANT
- THE AUTHOR.
- “Deceived in Freindship and Betrayed in Love.”
- LETTER the FIRST From ISABEL to LAURA
- How often, in answer to my repeated intreaties that you would give my
- Daughter a regular detail of the Misfortunes and Adventures of your
- Life, have you said “No, my freind never will I comply with your request
- till I may be no longer in Danger of again experiencing such dreadful
- ones.”
- Surely that time is now at hand. You are this day 55. If a woman
- may ever be said to be in safety from the determined Perseverance of
- disagreeable Lovers and the cruel Persecutions of obstinate Fathers,
- surely it must be at such a time of Life. Isabel
- LETTER 2nd LAURA to ISABEL
- Altho' I cannot agree with you in supposing that I shall never again be
- exposed to Misfortunes as unmerited as those I have already experienced,
- yet to avoid the imputation of Obstinacy or ill-nature, I will gratify
- the curiosity of your daughter; and may the fortitude with which I have
- suffered the many afflictions of my past Life, prove to her a useful
- lesson for the support of those which may befall her in her own. Laura
- LETTER 3rd LAURA to MARIANNE
- As the Daughter of my most intimate freind I think you entitled to that
- knowledge of my unhappy story, which your Mother has so often solicited
- me to give you.
- My Father was a native of Ireland and an inhabitant of Wales; my Mother
- was the natural Daughter of a Scotch Peer by an italian Opera-girl--I
- was born in Spain and received my Education at a Convent in France.
- When I had reached my eighteenth Year I was recalled by my Parents to
- my paternal roof in Wales. Our mansion was situated in one of the most
- romantic parts of the Vale of Uske. Tho' my Charms are now considerably
- softened and somewhat impaired by the Misfortunes I have undergone, I
- was once beautiful. But lovely as I was the Graces of my Person were the
- least of my Perfections. Of every accomplishment accustomary to my sex,
- I was Mistress. When in the Convent, my progress had always exceeded my
- instructions, my Acquirements had been wonderfull for my age, and I had
- shortly surpassed my Masters.
- In my Mind, every Virtue that could adorn it was centered; it was the
- Rendez-vous of every good Quality and of every noble sentiment.
- A sensibility too tremblingly alive to every affliction of my Freinds,
- my Acquaintance and particularly to every affliction of my own, was my
- only fault, if a fault it could be called. Alas! how altered now! Tho'
- indeed my own Misfortunes do not make less impression on me than they
- ever did, yet now I never feel for those of an other. My accomplishments
- too, begin to fade--I can neither sing so well nor Dance so gracefully
- as I once did--and I have entirely forgot the MINUET DELA COUR. Adeiu.
- Laura.
- LETTER 4th Laura to MARIANNE
- Our neighbourhood was small, for it consisted only of your Mother. She
- may probably have already told you that being left by her Parents
- in indigent Circumstances she had retired into Wales on eoconomical
- motives. There it was our freindship first commenced. Isobel was then
- one and twenty. Tho' pleasing both in her Person and Manners (between
- ourselves) she never possessed the hundredth part of my Beauty or
- Accomplishments. Isabel had seen the World. She had passed 2 Years at
- one of the first Boarding-schools in London; had spent a fortnight in
- Bath and had supped one night in Southampton.
- “Beware my Laura (she would often say) Beware of the insipid Vanities
- and idle Dissipations of the Metropolis of England; Beware of the
- unmeaning Luxuries of Bath and of the stinking fish of Southampton.”
- “Alas! (exclaimed I) how am I to avoid those evils I shall never
- be exposed to? What probability is there of my ever tasting the
- Dissipations of London, the Luxuries of Bath, or the stinking Fish of
- Southampton? I who am doomed to waste my Days of Youth and Beauty in an
- humble Cottage in the Vale of Uske.”
- Ah! little did I then think I was ordained so soon to quit that humble
- Cottage for the Deceitfull Pleasures of the World. Adeiu Laura.
- LETTER 5th LAURA to MARIANNE
- One Evening in December as my Father, my Mother and myself, were
- arranged in social converse round our Fireside, we were on a sudden
- greatly astonished, by hearing a violent knocking on the outward door of
- our rustic Cot.
- My Father started--“What noise is that,” (said he.) “It sounds like a
- loud rapping at the door”--(replied my Mother.) “it does indeed.” (cried
- I.) “I am of your opinion; (said my Father) it certainly does appear
- to proceed from some uncommon violence exerted against our unoffending
- door.” “Yes (exclaimed I) I cannot help thinking it must be somebody who
- knocks for admittance.”
- “That is another point (replied he;) We must not pretend to determine
- on what motive the person may knock--tho' that someone DOES rap at the
- door, I am partly convinced.”
- Here, a 2d tremendous rap interrupted my Father in his speech, and
- somewhat alarmed my Mother and me.
- “Had we better not go and see who it is? (said she) the servants are
- out.” “I think we had.” (replied I.) “Certainly, (added my Father)
- by all means.” “Shall we go now?” (said my Mother,) “The sooner the
- better.” (answered he.) “Oh! let no time be lost” (cried I.)
- A third more violent Rap than ever again assaulted our ears. “I am
- certain there is somebody knocking at the Door.” (said my Mother.)
- “I think there must,” (replied my Father) “I fancy the servants are
- returned; (said I) I think I hear Mary going to the Door.” “I'm glad of
- it (cried my Father) for I long to know who it is.”
- I was right in my conjecture; for Mary instantly entering the Room,
- informed us that a young Gentleman and his Servant were at the door, who
- had lossed their way, were very cold and begged leave to warm themselves
- by our fire.
- “Won't you admit them?” (said I.) “You have no objection, my Dear?”
- (said my Father.) “None in the World.” (replied my Mother.)
- Mary, without waiting for any further commands immediately left the room
- and quickly returned introducing the most beauteous and amiable Youth, I
- had ever beheld. The servant she kept to herself.
- My natural sensibility had already been greatly affected by the
- sufferings of the unfortunate stranger and no sooner did I first behold
- him, than I felt that on him the happiness or Misery of my future Life
- must depend. Adeiu Laura.
- LETTER 6th LAURA to MARIANNE
- The noble Youth informed us that his name was Lindsay--for particular
- reasons however I shall conceal it under that of Talbot. He told us that
- he was the son of an English Baronet, that his Mother had been for many
- years no more and that he had a Sister of the middle size. “My Father
- (he continued) is a mean and mercenary wretch--it is only to such
- particular freinds as this Dear Party that I would thus betray his
- failings. Your Virtues my amiable Polydore (addressing himself to my
- father) yours Dear Claudia and yours my Charming Laura call on me to
- repose in you, my confidence.” We bowed. “My Father seduced by the false
- glare of Fortune and the Deluding Pomp of Title, insisted on my giving
- my hand to Lady Dorothea. No never exclaimed I. Lady Dorothea is lovely
- and Engaging; I prefer no woman to her; but know Sir, that I scorn to
- marry her in compliance with your Wishes. No! Never shall it be said
- that I obliged my Father.”
- We all admired the noble Manliness of his reply. He continued.
- “Sir Edward was surprised; he had perhaps little expected to meet with
- so spirited an opposition to his will. “Where, Edward in the name of
- wonder (said he) did you pick up this unmeaning gibberish? You have
- been studying Novels I suspect.” I scorned to answer: it would have
- been beneath my dignity. I mounted my Horse and followed by my faithful
- William set forth for my Aunts.”
- “My Father's house is situated in Bedfordshire, my Aunt's in Middlesex,
- and tho' I flatter myself with being a tolerable proficient in
- Geography, I know not how it happened, but I found myself entering this
- beautifull Vale which I find is in South Wales, when I had expected to
- have reached my Aunts.”
- “After having wandered some time on the Banks of the Uske without
- knowing which way to go, I began to lament my cruel Destiny in the
- bitterest and most pathetic Manner. It was now perfectly dark, not a
- single star was there to direct my steps, and I know not what might have
- befallen me had I not at length discerned thro' the solemn Gloom that
- surrounded me a distant light, which as I approached it, I discovered
- to be the chearfull Blaze of your fire. Impelled by the combination
- of Misfortunes under which I laboured, namely Fear, Cold and Hunger I
- hesitated not to ask admittance which at length I have gained; and
- now my Adorable Laura (continued he taking my Hand) when may I hope
- to receive that reward of all the painfull sufferings I have undergone
- during the course of my attachment to you, to which I have ever aspired.
- Oh! when will you reward me with Yourself?”
- “This instant, Dear and Amiable Edward.” (replied I.). We were
- immediately united by my Father, who tho' he had never taken orders had
- been bred to the Church. Adeiu Laura
- LETTER 7th LAURA to MARIANNE
- We remained but a few days after our Marriage, in the Vale of Uske.
- After taking an affecting Farewell of my Father, my Mother and my
- Isabel, I accompanied Edward to his Aunt's in Middlesex. Philippa
- received us both with every expression of affectionate Love. My arrival
- was indeed a most agreable surprise to her as she had not only been
- totally ignorant of my Marriage with her Nephew, but had never even had
- the slightest idea of there being such a person in the World.
- Augusta, the sister of Edward was on a visit to her when we arrived.
- I found her exactly what her Brother had described her to be--of the
- middle size. She received me with equal surprise though not with equal
- Cordiality, as Philippa. There was a disagreable coldness and Forbidding
- Reserve in her reception of me which was equally distressing and
- Unexpected. None of that interesting Sensibility or amiable simpathy
- in her manners and Address to me when we first met which should have
- distinguished our introduction to each other. Her Language was neither
- warm, nor affectionate, her expressions of regard were neither animated
- nor cordial; her arms were not opened to receive me to her Heart, tho'
- my own were extended to press her to mine.
- A short Conversation between Augusta and her Brother, which I
- accidentally overheard encreased my dislike to her, and convinced me
- that her Heart was no more formed for the soft ties of Love than for the
- endearing intercourse of Freindship.
- “But do you think that my Father will ever be reconciled to this
- imprudent connection?” (said Augusta.)
- “Augusta (replied the noble Youth) I thought you had a better opinion of
- me, than to imagine I would so abjectly degrade myself as to consider
- my Father's Concurrence in any of my affairs, either of Consequence
- or concern to me. Tell me Augusta with sincerity; did you ever know
- me consult his inclinations or follow his Advice in the least trifling
- Particular since the age of fifteen?”
- “Edward (replied she) you are surely too diffident in your own praise.
- Since you were fifteen only! My Dear Brother since you were five years
- old, I entirely acquit you of ever having willingly contributed to the
- satisfaction of your Father. But still I am not without apprehensions
- of your being shortly obliged to degrade yourself in your own eyes by
- seeking a support for your wife in the Generosity of Sir Edward.”
- “Never, never Augusta will I so demean myself. (said Edward). Support!
- What support will Laura want which she can receive from him?”
- “Only those very insignificant ones of Victuals and Drink.” (answered
- she.)
- “Victuals and Drink! (replied my Husband in a most nobly contemptuous
- Manner) and dost thou then imagine that there is no other support for
- an exalted mind (such as is my Laura's) than the mean and indelicate
- employment of Eating and Drinking?”
- “None that I know of, so efficacious.” (returned Augusta).
- “And did you then never feel the pleasing Pangs of Love, Augusta?
- (replied my Edward). Does it appear impossible to your vile and
- corrupted Palate, to exist on Love? Can you not conceive the Luxury of
- living in every distress that Poverty can inflict, with the object of
- your tenderest affection?”
- “You are too ridiculous (said Augusta) to argue with; perhaps however
- you may in time be convinced that...”
- Here I was prevented from hearing the remainder of her speech, by the
- appearance of a very Handsome young Woman, who was ushured into the Room
- at the Door of which I had been listening. On hearing her announced by
- the Name of “Lady Dorothea,” I instantly quitted my Post and followed
- her into the Parlour, for I well remembered that she was the Lady,
- proposed as a Wife for my Edward by the Cruel and Unrelenting Baronet.
- Altho' Lady Dorothea's visit was nominally to Philippa and Augusta, yet
- I have some reason to imagine that (acquainted with the Marriage and
- arrival of Edward) to see me was a principal motive to it.
- I soon perceived that tho' Lovely and Elegant in her Person and tho'
- Easy and Polite in her Address, she was of that inferior order of
- Beings with regard to Delicate Feeling, tender Sentiments, and refined
- Sensibility, of which Augusta was one.
- She staid but half an hour and neither in the Course of her Visit,
- confided to me any of her secret thoughts, nor requested me to confide
- in her, any of Mine. You will easily imagine therefore my Dear Marianne
- that I could not feel any ardent affection or very sincere Attachment
- for Lady Dorothea. Adeiu Laura.
- LETTER 8th LAURA to MARIANNE, in continuation
- Lady Dorothea had not left us long before another visitor as unexpected
- a one as her Ladyship, was announced. It was Sir Edward, who informed
- by Augusta of her Brother's marriage, came doubtless to reproach him for
- having dared to unite himself to me without his Knowledge. But Edward
- foreseeing his design, approached him with heroic fortitude as soon as
- he entered the Room, and addressed him in the following Manner.
- “Sir Edward, I know the motive of your Journey here--You come with the
- base Design of reproaching me for having entered into an indissoluble
- engagement with my Laura without your Consent. But Sir, I glory in the
- Act--. It is my greatest boast that I have incurred the displeasure of
- my Father!”
- So saying, he took my hand and whilst Sir Edward, Philippa, and Augusta
- were doubtless reflecting with admiration on his undaunted Bravery, led
- me from the Parlour to his Father's Carriage which yet remained at the
- Door and in which we were instantly conveyed from the pursuit of Sir
- Edward.
- The Postilions had at first received orders only to take the London
- road; as soon as we had sufficiently reflected However, we ordered them
- to Drive to M----. the seat of Edward's most particular freind, which
- was but a few miles distant.
- At M----. we arrived in a few hours; and on sending in our names were
- immediately admitted to Sophia, the Wife of Edward's freind. After
- having been deprived during the course of 3 weeks of a real freind (for
- such I term your Mother) imagine my transports at beholding one, most
- truly worthy of the Name. Sophia was rather above the middle size; most
- elegantly formed. A soft languor spread over her lovely features, but
- increased their Beauty--. It was the Charectarestic of her Mind--. She
- was all sensibility and Feeling. We flew into each others arms and after
- having exchanged vows of mutual Freindship for the rest of our Lives,
- instantly unfolded to each other the most inward secrets of our
- Hearts--. We were interrupted in the delightfull Employment by the
- entrance of Augustus, (Edward's freind) who was just returned from a
- solitary ramble.
- Never did I see such an affecting Scene as was the meeting of Edward and
- Augustus.
- “My Life! my Soul!” (exclaimed the former) “My adorable angel!” (replied
- the latter) as they flew into each other's arms. It was too pathetic
- for the feelings of Sophia and myself--We fainted alternately on a sofa.
- Adeiu Laura.
- LETTER the 9th From the same to the same
- Towards the close of the day we received the following Letter from
- Philippa.
- “Sir Edward is greatly incensed by your abrupt departure; he has
- taken back Augusta to Bedfordshire. Much as I wish to enjoy again your
- charming society, I cannot determine to snatch you from that, of such
- dear and deserving Freinds--When your Visit to them is terminated, I
- trust you will return to the arms of your” “Philippa.”
- We returned a suitable answer to this affectionate Note and after
- thanking her for her kind invitation assured her that we would certainly
- avail ourselves of it, whenever we might have no other place to go to.
- Tho' certainly nothing could to any reasonable Being, have appeared more
- satisfactory, than so gratefull a reply to her invitation, yet I know
- not how it was, but she was certainly capricious enough to be displeased
- with our behaviour and in a few weeks after, either to revenge our
- Conduct, or releive her own solitude, married a young and illiterate
- Fortune-hunter. This imprudent step (tho' we were sensible that it would
- probably deprive us of that fortune which Philippa had ever taught us to
- expect) could not on our own accounts, excite from our exalted minds a
- single sigh; yet fearfull lest it might prove a source of endless misery
- to the deluded Bride, our trembling Sensibility was greatly affected
- when we were first informed of the Event. The affectionate Entreaties of
- Augustus and Sophia that we would for ever consider their House as our
- Home, easily prevailed on us to determine never more to leave them, In
- the society of my Edward and this Amiable Pair, I passed the happiest
- moments of my Life; Our time was most delightfully spent, in mutual
- Protestations of Freindship, and in vows of unalterable Love, in which
- we were secure from being interrupted, by intruding and disagreable
- Visitors, as Augustus and Sophia had on their first Entrance in the
- Neighbourhood, taken due care to inform the surrounding Families, that
- as their happiness centered wholly in themselves, they wished for no
- other society. But alas! my Dear Marianne such Happiness as I then
- enjoyed was too perfect to be lasting. A most severe and unexpected Blow
- at once destroyed every sensation of Pleasure. Convinced as you must be
- from what I have already told you concerning Augustus and Sophia, that
- there never were a happier Couple, I need not I imagine, inform you that
- their union had been contrary to the inclinations of their Cruel
- and Mercenery Parents; who had vainly endeavoured with obstinate
- Perseverance to force them into a Marriage with those whom they had ever
- abhorred; but with a Heroic Fortitude worthy to be related and admired,
- they had both, constantly refused to submit to such despotic Power.
- After having so nobly disentangled themselves from the shackles of
- Parental Authority, by a Clandestine Marriage, they were determined
- never to forfeit the good opinion they had gained in the World, in
- so doing, by accepting any proposals of reconciliation that might be
- offered them by their Fathers--to this farther tryal of their noble
- independance however they never were exposed.
- They had been married but a few months when our visit to them commenced
- during which time they had been amply supported by a considerable sum of
- money which Augustus had gracefully purloined from his unworthy father's
- Escritoire, a few days before his union with Sophia.
- By our arrival their Expenses were considerably encreased tho' their
- means for supplying them were then nearly exhausted. But they, Exalted
- Creatures! scorned to reflect a moment on their pecuniary Distresses and
- would have blushed at the idea of paying their Debts.--Alas! what was
- their Reward for such disinterested Behaviour! The beautifull Augustus
- was arrested and we were all undone. Such perfidious Treachery in the
- merciless perpetrators of the Deed will shock your gentle nature Dearest
- Marianne as much as it then affected the Delicate sensibility of
- Edward, Sophia, your Laura, and of Augustus himself. To compleat such
- unparalelled Barbarity we were informed that an Execution in the House
- would shortly take place. Ah! what could we do but what we did! We
- sighed and fainted on the sofa. Adeiu Laura.
- LETTER 10th LAURA in continuation
- When we were somewhat recovered from the overpowering Effusions of our
- grief, Edward desired that we would consider what was the most prudent
- step to be taken in our unhappy situation while he repaired to his
- imprisoned freind to lament over his misfortunes. We promised that we
- would, and he set forwards on his journey to Town. During his absence
- we faithfully complied with his Desire and after the most mature
- Deliberation, at length agreed that the best thing we could do was
- to leave the House; of which we every moment expected the officers
- of Justice to take possession. We waited therefore with the greatest
- impatience, for the return of Edward in order to impart to him the
- result of our Deliberations. But no Edward appeared. In vain did we
- count the tedious moments of his absence--in vain did we weep--in
- vain even did we sigh--no Edward returned--. This was too cruel, too
- unexpected a Blow to our Gentle Sensibility--we could not support it--we
- could only faint. At length collecting all the Resolution I was Mistress
- of, I arose and after packing up some necessary apparel for Sophia and
- myself, I dragged her to a Carriage I had ordered and we instantly set
- out for London. As the Habitation of Augustus was within twelve miles
- of Town, it was not long e'er we arrived there, and no sooner had we
- entered Holboun than letting down one of the Front Glasses I enquired of
- every decent-looking Person that we passed “If they had seen my Edward?”
- But as we drove too rapidly to allow them to answer my repeated
- Enquiries, I gained little, or indeed, no information concerning him.
- “Where am I to drive?” said the Postilion. “To Newgate Gentle Youth
- (replied I), to see Augustus.” “Oh! no, no, (exclaimed Sophia) I cannot
- go to Newgate; I shall not be able to support the sight of my Augustus
- in so cruel a confinement--my feelings are sufficiently shocked by
- the RECITAL, of his Distress, but to behold it will overpower my
- Sensibility.” As I perfectly agreed with her in the Justice of her
- Sentiments the Postilion was instantly directed to return into the
- Country. You may perhaps have been somewhat surprised my Dearest
- Marianne, that in the Distress I then endured, destitute of any support,
- and unprovided with any Habitation, I should never once have remembered
- my Father and Mother or my paternal Cottage in the Vale of Uske. To
- account for this seeming forgetfullness I must inform you of a trifling
- circumstance concerning them which I have as yet never mentioned. The
- death of my Parents a few weeks after my Departure, is the circumstance
- I allude to. By their decease I became the lawfull Inheritress of their
- House and Fortune. But alas! the House had never been their own and
- their Fortune had only been an Annuity on their own Lives. Such is
- the Depravity of the World! To your Mother I should have returned with
- Pleasure, should have been happy to have introduced to her, my charming
- Sophia and should with Chearfullness have passed the remainder of my
- Life in their dear Society in the Vale of Uske, had not one obstacle
- to the execution of so agreable a scheme, intervened; which was the
- Marriage and Removal of your Mother to a distant part of Ireland. Adeiu
- Laura.
- LETTER 11th LAURA in continuation
- “I have a Relation in Scotland (said Sophia to me as we left London) who
- I am certain would not hesitate in receiving me.” “Shall I order the Boy
- to drive there?” said I--but instantly recollecting myself, exclaimed,
- “Alas I fear it will be too long a Journey for the Horses.” Unwilling
- however to act only from my own inadequate Knowledge of the Strength and
- Abilities of Horses, I consulted the Postilion, who was entirely of my
- Opinion concerning the Affair. We therefore determined to change Horses
- at the next Town and to travel Post the remainder of the Journey--. When
- we arrived at the last Inn we were to stop at, which was but a few miles
- from the House of Sophia's Relation, unwilling to intrude our Society on
- him unexpected and unthought of, we wrote a very elegant and well
- penned Note to him containing an account of our Destitute and melancholy
- Situation, and of our intention to spend some months with him in
- Scotland. As soon as we had dispatched this Letter, we immediately
- prepared to follow it in person and were stepping into the Carriage
- for that Purpose when our attention was attracted by the Entrance of
- a coroneted Coach and 4 into the Inn-yard. A Gentleman considerably
- advanced in years descended from it. At his first Appearance my
- Sensibility was wonderfully affected and e'er I had gazed at him a 2d
- time, an instinctive sympathy whispered to my Heart, that he was my
- Grandfather. Convinced that I could not be mistaken in my conjecture I
- instantly sprang from the Carriage I had just entered, and following the
- Venerable Stranger into the Room he had been shewn to, I threw myself
- on my knees before him and besought him to acknowledge me as his Grand
- Child. He started, and having attentively examined my features, raised
- me from the Ground and throwing his Grand-fatherly arms around my Neck,
- exclaimed, “Acknowledge thee! Yes dear resemblance of my Laurina and
- Laurina's Daughter, sweet image of my Claudia and my Claudia's Mother,
- I do acknowledge thee as the Daughter of the one and the Grandaughter of
- the other.” While he was thus tenderly embracing me, Sophia astonished
- at my precipitate Departure, entered the Room in search of me. No sooner
- had she caught the eye of the venerable Peer, than he exclaimed with
- every mark of Astonishment--“Another Grandaughter! Yes, yes, I see you
- are the Daughter of my Laurina's eldest Girl; your resemblance to the
- beauteous Matilda sufficiently proclaims it. “Oh!” replied Sophia, “when
- I first beheld you the instinct of Nature whispered me that we were in
- some degree related--But whether Grandfathers, or Grandmothers, I could
- not pretend to determine.” He folded her in his arms, and whilst they
- were tenderly embracing, the Door of the Apartment opened and a most
- beautifull young Man appeared. On perceiving him Lord St. Clair started
- and retreating back a few paces, with uplifted Hands, said, “Another
- Grand-child! What an unexpected Happiness is this! to discover in the
- space of 3 minutes, as many of my Descendants! This I am certain is
- Philander the son of my Laurina's 3d girl the amiable Bertha; there
- wants now but the presence of Gustavus to compleat the Union of my
- Laurina's Grand-Children.”
- “And here he is; (said a Gracefull Youth who that instant entered the
- room) here is the Gustavus you desire to see. I am the son of Agatha
- your Laurina's 4th and youngest Daughter,” “I see you are indeed;
- replied Lord St. Clair--But tell me (continued he looking fearfully
- towards the Door) tell me, have I any other Grand-children in the
- House.” “None my Lord.” “Then I will provide for you all without farther
- delay--Here are 4 Banknotes of 50L each--Take them and remember I
- have done the Duty of a Grandfather.” He instantly left the Room and
- immediately afterwards the House. Adeiu, Laura.
- LETTER the 12th LAURA in continuation
- You may imagine how greatly we were surprised by the sudden departure
- of Lord St Clair. “Ignoble Grand-sire!” exclaimed Sophia. “Unworthy
- Grandfather!” said I, and instantly fainted in each other's arms. How
- long we remained in this situation I know not; but when we recovered
- we found ourselves alone, without either Gustavus, Philander, or the
- Banknotes. As we were deploring our unhappy fate, the Door of the
- Apartment opened and “Macdonald” was announced. He was Sophia's cousin.
- The haste with which he came to our releif so soon after the receipt
- of our Note, spoke so greatly in his favour that I hesitated not to
- pronounce him at first sight, a tender and simpathetic Freind. Alas!
- he little deserved the name--for though he told us that he was much
- concerned at our Misfortunes, yet by his own account it appeared that
- the perusal of them, had neither drawn from him a single sigh, nor
- induced him to bestow one curse on our vindictive stars--. He told
- Sophia that his Daughter depended on her returning with him to
- Macdonald-Hall, and that as his Cousin's freind he should be happy
- to see me there also. To Macdonald-Hall, therefore we went, and were
- received with great kindness by Janetta the Daughter of Macdonald, and
- the Mistress of the Mansion. Janetta was then only fifteen; naturally
- well disposed, endowed with a susceptible Heart, and a simpathetic
- Disposition, she might, had these amiable qualities been properly
- encouraged, have been an ornament to human Nature; but unfortunately her
- Father possessed not a soul sufficiently exalted to admire so promising
- a Disposition, and had endeavoured by every means on his power
- to prevent it encreasing with her Years. He had actually so far
- extinguished the natural noble Sensibility of her Heart, as to prevail
- on her to accept an offer from a young Man of his Recommendation. They
- were to be married in a few months, and Graham, was in the House when
- we arrived. WE soon saw through his character. He was just such a Man as
- one might have expected to be the choice of Macdonald. They said he was
- Sensible, well-informed, and Agreable; we did not pretend to Judge of
- such trifles, but as we were convinced he had no soul, that he had
- never read the sorrows of Werter, and that his Hair bore not the least
- resemblance to auburn, we were certain that Janetta could feel no
- affection for him, or at least that she ought to feel none. The very
- circumstance of his being her father's choice too, was so much in his
- disfavour, that had he been deserving her, in every other respect yet
- THAT of itself ought to have been a sufficient reason in the Eyes of
- Janetta for rejecting him. These considerations we were determined to
- represent to her in their proper light and doubted not of meeting with
- the desired success from one naturally so well disposed; whose errors in
- the affair had only arisen from a want of proper confidence in her own
- opinion, and a suitable contempt of her father's. We found her indeed
- all that our warmest wishes could have hoped for; we had no difficulty
- to convince her that it was impossible she could love Graham, or that it
- was her Duty to disobey her Father; the only thing at which she rather
- seemed to hesitate was our assertion that she must be attached to some
- other Person. For some time, she persevered in declaring that she knew
- no other young man for whom she had the the smallest Affection; but upon
- explaining the impossibility of such a thing she said that she beleived
- she DID LIKE Captain M'Kenrie better than any one she knew besides. This
- confession satisfied us and after having enumerated the good Qualities
- of M'Kenrie and assured her that she was violently in love with him, we
- desired to know whether he had ever in any wise declared his affection
- to her.
- “So far from having ever declared it, I have no reason to imagine that
- he has ever felt any for me.” said Janetta. “That he certainly adores
- you (replied Sophia) there can be no doubt--. The Attachment must be
- reciprocal. Did he never gaze on you with admiration--tenderly press
- your hand--drop an involantary tear--and leave the room abruptly?”
- “Never (replied she) that I remember--he has always left the room indeed
- when his visit has been ended, but has never gone away particularly
- abruptly or without making a bow.” Indeed my Love (said I) you must be
- mistaken--for it is absolutely impossible that he should ever have left
- you but with Confusion, Despair, and Precipitation. Consider but for a
- moment Janetta, and you must be convinced how absurd it is to suppose
- that he could ever make a Bow, or behave like any other Person.”
- Having settled this Point to our satisfaction, the next we took into
- consideration was, to determine in what manner we should inform M'Kenrie
- of the favourable Opinion Janetta entertained of him.... We at length
- agreed to acquaint him with it by an anonymous Letter which Sophia drew
- up in the following manner.
- “Oh! happy Lover of the beautifull Janetta, oh! amiable Possessor of
- HER Heart whose hand is destined to another, why do you thus delay a
- confession of your attachment to the amiable Object of it? Oh! consider
- that a few weeks will at once put an end to every flattering Hope that
- you may now entertain, by uniting the unfortunate Victim of her father's
- Cruelty to the execrable and detested Graham.”
- “Alas! why do you thus so cruelly connive at the projected Misery of
- her and of yourself by delaying to communicate that scheme which had
- doubtless long possessed your imagination? A secret Union will at once
- secure the felicity of both.”
- The amiable M'Kenrie, whose modesty as he afterwards assured us had
- been the only reason of his having so long concealed the violence of
- his affection for Janetta, on receiving this Billet flew on the wings of
- Love to Macdonald-Hall, and so powerfully pleaded his Attachment to her
- who inspired it, that after a few more private interveiws, Sophia and
- I experienced the satisfaction of seeing them depart for Gretna-Green,
- which they chose for the celebration of their Nuptials, in preference
- to any other place although it was at a considerable distance from
- Macdonald-Hall. Adeiu Laura.
- LETTER the 13th LAURA in continuation
- They had been gone nearly a couple of Hours, before either Macdonald or
- Graham had entertained any suspicion of the affair. And they might not
- even then have suspected it, but for the following little Accident.
- Sophia happening one day to open a private Drawer in Macdonald's Library
- with one of her own keys, discovered that it was the Place where he
- kept his Papers of consequence and amongst them some bank notes of
- considerable amount. This discovery she imparted to me; and having
- agreed together that it would be a proper treatment of so vile a Wretch
- as Macdonald to deprive him of money, perhaps dishonestly gained, it was
- determined that the next time we should either of us happen to go that
- way, we would take one or more of the Bank notes from the drawer. This
- well meant Plan we had often successfully put in Execution; but alas!
- on the very day of Janetta's Escape, as Sophia was majestically removing
- the 5th Bank-note from the Drawer to her own purse, she was suddenly
- most impertinently interrupted in her employment by the entrance of
- Macdonald himself, in a most abrupt and precipitate Manner. Sophia (who
- though naturally all winning sweetness could when occasions demanded it
- call forth the Dignity of her sex) instantly put on a most forbidding
- look, and darting an angry frown on the undaunted culprit, demanded in
- a haughty tone of voice “Wherefore her retirement was thus insolently
- broken in on?” The unblushing Macdonald, without even endeavouring to
- exculpate himself from the crime he was charged with, meanly endeavoured
- to reproach Sophia with ignobly defrauding him of his money... The
- dignity of Sophia was wounded; “Wretch (exclaimed she, hastily replacing
- the Bank-note in the Drawer) how darest thou to accuse me of an Act,
- of which the bare idea makes me blush?” The base wretch was still
- unconvinced and continued to upbraid the justly-offended Sophia in such
- opprobious Language, that at length he so greatly provoked the gentle
- sweetness of her Nature, as to induce her to revenge herself on him by
- informing him of Janetta's Elopement, and of the active Part we had
- both taken in the affair. At this period of their Quarrel I entered the
- Library and was as you may imagine equally offended as Sophia at the
- ill-grounded accusations of the malevolent and contemptible Macdonald.
- “Base Miscreant! (cried I) how canst thou thus undauntedly endeavour to
- sully the spotless reputation of such bright Excellence? Why dost thou
- not suspect MY innocence as soon?” “Be satisfied Madam (replied he) I
- DO suspect it, and therefore must desire that you will both leave this
- House in less than half an hour.”
- “We shall go willingly; (answered Sophia) our hearts have long detested
- thee, and nothing but our freindship for thy Daughter could have induced
- us to remain so long beneath thy roof.”
- “Your Freindship for my Daughter has indeed been most powerfully exerted
- by throwing her into the arms of an unprincipled Fortune-hunter.”
- (replied he)
- “Yes, (exclaimed I) amidst every misfortune, it will afford us some
- consolation to reflect that by this one act of Freindship to Janetta,
- we have amply discharged every obligation that we have received from her
- father.”
- “It must indeed be a most gratefull reflection, to your exalted minds.”
- (said he.)
- As soon as we had packed up our wardrobe and valuables, we left
- Macdonald Hall, and after having walked about a mile and a half we
- sate down by the side of a clear limpid stream to refresh our exhausted
- limbs. The place was suited to meditation. A grove of full-grown Elms
- sheltered us from the East--. A Bed of full-grown Nettles from the
- West--. Before us ran the murmuring brook and behind us ran the
- turn-pike road. We were in a mood for contemplation and in a Disposition
- to enjoy so beautifull a spot. A mutual silence which had for some time
- reigned between us, was at length broke by my exclaiming--“What a lovely
- scene! Alas why are not Edward and Augustus here to enjoy its Beauties
- with us?”
- “Ah! my beloved Laura (cried Sophia) for pity's sake forbear recalling
- to my remembrance the unhappy situation of my imprisoned Husband. Alas,
- what would I not give to learn the fate of my Augustus! to know if he is
- still in Newgate, or if he is yet hung. But never shall I be able so far
- to conquer my tender sensibility as to enquire after him. Oh! do not
- I beseech you ever let me again hear you repeat his beloved name--. It
- affects me too deeply--. I cannot bear to hear him mentioned it wounds
- my feelings.”
- “Excuse me my Sophia for having thus unwillingly offended you--” replied
- I--and then changing the conversation, desired her to admire the noble
- Grandeur of the Elms which sheltered us from the Eastern Zephyr. “Alas!
- my Laura (returned she) avoid so melancholy a subject, I intreat you.
- Do not again wound my Sensibility by observations on those elms. They
- remind me of Augustus. He was like them, tall, magestic--he possessed
- that noble grandeur which you admire in them.”
- I was silent, fearfull lest I might any more unwillingly distress her by
- fixing on any other subject of conversation which might again remind her
- of Augustus.
- “Why do you not speak my Laura? (said she after a short pause) “I cannot
- support this silence you must not leave me to my own reflections; they
- ever recur to Augustus.”
- “What a beautifull sky! (said I) How charmingly is the azure varied by
- those delicate streaks of white!”
- “Oh! my Laura (replied she hastily withdrawing her Eyes from a momentary
- glance at the sky) do not thus distress me by calling my Attention to
- an object which so cruelly reminds me of my Augustus's blue sattin
- waistcoat striped in white! In pity to your unhappy freind avoid a
- subject so distressing.” What could I do? The feelings of Sophia were
- at that time so exquisite, and the tenderness she felt for Augustus so
- poignant that I had not power to start any other topic, justly fearing
- that it might in some unforseen manner again awaken all her sensibility
- by directing her thoughts to her Husband. Yet to be silent would be
- cruel; she had intreated me to talk.
- From this Dilemma I was most fortunately releived by an accident truly
- apropos; it was the lucky overturning of a Gentleman's Phaeton, on the
- road which ran murmuring behind us. It was a most fortunate accident
- as it diverted the attention of Sophia from the melancholy reflections
- which she had been before indulging. We instantly quitted our seats and
- ran to the rescue of those who but a few moments before had been in so
- elevated a situation as a fashionably high Phaeton, but who were
- now laid low and sprawling in the Dust. “What an ample subject for
- reflection on the uncertain Enjoyments of this World, would not that
- Phaeton and the Life of Cardinal Wolsey afford a thinking Mind!” said I
- to Sophia as we were hastening to the field of Action.
- She had not time to answer me, for every thought was now engaged by the
- horrid spectacle before us. Two Gentlemen most elegantly attired
- but weltering in their blood was what first struck our Eyes--we
- approached--they were Edward and Augustus--. Yes dearest Marianne they
- were our Husbands. Sophia shreiked and fainted on the ground--I screamed
- and instantly ran mad--. We remained thus mutually deprived of our
- senses, some minutes, and on regaining them were deprived of them
- again. For an Hour and a Quarter did we continue in this unfortunate
- situation--Sophia fainting every moment and I running mad as often. At
- length a groan from the hapless Edward (who alone retained any share
- of life) restored us to ourselves. Had we indeed before imagined that
- either of them lived, we should have been more sparing of our Greif--but
- as we had supposed when we first beheld them that they were no more,
- we knew that nothing could remain to be done but what we were about.
- No sooner did we therefore hear my Edward's groan than postponing our
- lamentations for the present, we hastily ran to the Dear Youth and
- kneeling on each side of him implored him not to die--. “Laura (said He
- fixing his now languid Eyes on me) I fear I have been overturned.”
- I was overjoyed to find him yet sensible.
- “Oh! tell me Edward (said I) tell me I beseech you before you die, what
- has befallen you since that unhappy Day in which Augustus was arrested
- and we were separated--”
- “I will” (said he) and instantly fetching a deep sigh, Expired--. Sophia
- immediately sank again into a swoon--. MY greif was more audible. My
- Voice faltered, My Eyes assumed a vacant stare, my face became as pale
- as Death, and my senses were considerably impaired--.
- “Talk not to me of Phaetons (said I, raving in a frantic, incoherent
- manner)--Give me a violin--. I'll play to him and sooth him in his
- melancholy Hours--Beware ye gentle Nymphs of Cupid's Thunderbolts, avoid
- the piercing shafts of Jupiter--Look at that grove of Firs--I see a Leg
- of Mutton--They told me Edward was not Dead; but they deceived me--they
- took him for a cucumber--” Thus I continued wildly exclaiming on my
- Edward's Death--. For two Hours did I rave thus madly and should not
- then have left off, as I was not in the least fatigued, had not Sophia
- who was just recovered from her swoon, intreated me to consider that
- Night was now approaching and that the Damps began to fall. “And
- whither shall we go (said I) to shelter us from either?” “To that white
- Cottage.” (replied she pointing to a neat Building which rose up amidst
- the grove of Elms and which I had not before observed--) I agreed and we
- instantly walked to it--we knocked at the door--it was opened by an old
- woman; on being requested to afford us a Night's Lodging, she informed
- us that her House was but small, that she had only two Bedrooms, but
- that However we should be wellcome to one of them. We were satisfied and
- followed the good woman into the House where we were greatly cheered
- by the sight of a comfortable fire--. She was a widow and had only one
- Daughter, who was then just seventeen--One of the best of ages; but
- alas! she was very plain and her name was Bridget..... Nothing therfore
- could be expected from her--she could not be supposed to possess either
- exalted Ideas, Delicate Feelings or refined Sensibilities--. She was
- nothing more than a mere good-tempered, civil and obliging young woman;
- as such we could scarcely dislike here--she was only an Object of
- Contempt--. Adeiu Laura.
- LETTER the 14th LAURA in continuation
- Arm yourself my amiable young Freind with all the philosophy you are
- Mistress of; summon up all the fortitude you possess, for alas! in the
- perusal of the following Pages your sensibility will be most severely
- tried. Ah! what were the misfortunes I had before experienced and which
- I have already related to you, to the one I am now going to inform you
- of. The Death of my Father and my Mother and my Husband though almost
- more than my gentle Nature could support, were trifles in comparison
- to the misfortune I am now proceeding to relate. The morning after
- our arrival at the Cottage, Sophia complained of a violent pain in her
- delicate limbs, accompanied with a disagreable Head-ake She attributed
- it to a cold caught by her continued faintings in the open air as the
- Dew was falling the Evening before. This I feared was but too probably
- the case; since how could it be otherwise accounted for that I should
- have escaped the same indisposition, but by supposing that the
- bodily Exertions I had undergone in my repeated fits of frenzy had so
- effectually circulated and warmed my Blood as to make me proof against
- the chilling Damps of Night, whereas, Sophia lying totally inactive
- on the ground must have been exposed to all their severity. I was most
- seriously alarmed by her illness which trifling as it may appear to
- you, a certain instinctive sensibility whispered me, would in the End be
- fatal to her.
- Alas! my fears were but too fully justified; she grew gradually
- worse--and I daily became more alarmed for her. At length she was
- obliged to confine herself solely to the Bed allotted us by our worthy
- Landlady--. Her disorder turned to a galloping Consumption and in a few
- days carried her off. Amidst all my Lamentations for her (and violent
- you may suppose they were) I yet received some consolation in the
- reflection of my having paid every attention to her, that could be
- offered, in her illness. I had wept over her every Day--had bathed her
- sweet face with my tears and had pressed her fair Hands continually in
- mine--. “My beloved Laura (said she to me a few Hours before she died)
- take warning from my unhappy End and avoid the imprudent conduct which
- had occasioned it... Beware of fainting-fits... Though at the time they
- may be refreshing and agreable yet beleive me they will in the end, if
- too often repeated and at improper seasons, prove destructive to your
- Constitution... My fate will teach you this.. I die a Martyr to my greif
- for the loss of Augustus.. One fatal swoon has cost me my Life.. Beware
- of swoons Dear Laura.... A frenzy fit is not one quarter so pernicious;
- it is an exercise to the Body and if not too violent, is I dare say
- conducive to Health in its consequences--Run mad as often as you chuse;
- but do not faint--”
- These were the last words she ever addressed to me.. It was her dieing
- Advice to her afflicted Laura, who has ever most faithfully adhered to
- it.
- After having attended my lamented freind to her Early Grave, I
- immediately (tho' late at night) left the detested Village in which
- she died, and near which had expired my Husband and Augustus. I had not
- walked many yards from it before I was overtaken by a stage-coach,
- in which I instantly took a place, determined to proceed in it to
- Edinburgh, where I hoped to find some kind some pitying Freind who would
- receive and comfort me in my afflictions.
- It was so dark when I entered the Coach that I could not distinguish
- the Number of my Fellow-travellers; I could only perceive that they were
- many. Regardless however of anything concerning them, I gave myself up
- to my own sad Reflections. A general silence prevailed--A silence, which
- was by nothing interrupted but by the loud and repeated snores of one of
- the Party.
- “What an illiterate villain must that man be! (thought I to myself) What
- a total want of delicate refinement must he have, who can thus shock our
- senses by such a brutal noise! He must I am certain be capable of every
- bad action! There is no crime too black for such a Character!” Thus
- reasoned I within myself, and doubtless such were the reflections of my
- fellow travellers.
- At length, returning Day enabled me to behold the unprincipled Scoundrel
- who had so violently disturbed my feelings. It was Sir Edward the father
- of my Deceased Husband. By his side sate Augusta, and on the same seat
- with me were your Mother and Lady Dorothea. Imagine my surprise at
- finding myself thus seated amongst my old Acquaintance. Great as was my
- astonishment, it was yet increased, when on looking out of Windows,
- I beheld the Husband of Philippa, with Philippa by his side, on the
- Coachbox and when on looking behind I beheld, Philander and Gustavus in
- the Basket. “Oh! Heavens, (exclaimed I) is it possible that I should
- so unexpectedly be surrounded by my nearest Relations and Connections?”
- These words roused the rest of the Party, and every eye was directed to
- the corner in which I sat. “Oh! my Isabel (continued I throwing myself
- across Lady Dorothea into her arms) receive once more to your Bosom the
- unfortunate Laura. Alas! when we last parted in the Vale of Usk, I was
- happy in being united to the best of Edwards; I had then a Father and
- a Mother, and had never known misfortunes--But now deprived of every
- freind but you--”
- “What! (interrupted Augusta) is my Brother dead then? Tell us I intreat
- you what is become of him?” “Yes, cold and insensible Nymph, (replied I)
- that luckless swain your Brother, is no more, and you may now glory in
- being the Heiress of Sir Edward's fortune.”
- Although I had always despised her from the Day I had overheard her
- conversation with my Edward, yet in civility I complied with hers and
- Sir Edward's intreaties that I would inform them of the whole melancholy
- affair. They were greatly shocked--even the obdurate Heart of Sir Edward
- and the insensible one of Augusta, were touched with sorrow, by the
- unhappy tale. At the request of your Mother I related to them every
- other misfortune which had befallen me since we parted. Of the
- imprisonment of Augustus and the absence of Edward--of our arrival
- in Scotland--of our unexpected Meeting with our Grand-father and our
- cousins--of our visit to Macdonald-Hall--of the singular service we
- there performed towards Janetta--of her Fathers ingratitude for it.. of
- his inhuman Behaviour, unaccountable suspicions, and barbarous treatment
- of us, in obliging us to leave the House.. of our lamentations on the
- loss of Edward and Augustus and finally of the melancholy Death of my
- beloved Companion.
- Pity and surprise were strongly depictured in your Mother's countenance,
- during the whole of my narration, but I am sorry to say, that to the
- eternal reproach of her sensibility, the latter infinitely predominated.
- Nay, faultless as my conduct had certainly been during the whole course
- of my late misfortunes and adventures, she pretended to find fault with
- my behaviour in many of the situations in which I had been placed. As
- I was sensible myself, that I had always behaved in a manner which
- reflected Honour on my Feelings and Refinement, I paid little attention
- to what she said, and desired her to satisfy my Curiosity by informing
- me how she came there, instead of wounding my spotless reputation with
- unjustifiable Reproaches. As soon as she had complyed with my wishes in
- this particular and had given me an accurate detail of every thing that
- had befallen her since our separation (the particulars of which if you
- are not already acquainted with, your Mother will give you) I applied to
- Augusta for the same information respecting herself, Sir Edward and Lady
- Dorothea.
- She told me that having a considerable taste for the Beauties of Nature,
- her curiosity to behold the delightful scenes it exhibited in that part
- of the World had been so much raised by Gilpin's Tour to the Highlands,
- that she had prevailed on her Father to undertake a Tour to Scotland and
- had persuaded Lady Dorothea to accompany them. That they had arrived at
- Edinburgh a few Days before and from thence had made daily Excursions
- into the Country around in the Stage Coach they were then in, from one
- of which Excursions they were at that time returning. My next enquiries
- were concerning Philippa and her Husband, the latter of whom I learned
- having spent all her fortune, had recourse for subsistence to the talent
- in which, he had always most excelled, namely, Driving, and that
- having sold every thing which belonged to them except their Coach, had
- converted it into a Stage and in order to be removed from any of his
- former Acquaintance, had driven it to Edinburgh from whence he went to
- Sterling every other Day. That Philippa still retaining her affection
- for her ungratefull Husband, had followed him to Scotland and generally
- accompanied him in his little Excursions to Sterling. “It has only been
- to throw a little money into their Pockets (continued Augusta) that my
- Father has always travelled in their Coach to veiw the beauties of the
- Country since our arrival in Scotland--for it would certainly have been
- much more agreable to us, to visit the Highlands in a Postchaise
- than merely to travel from Edinburgh to Sterling and from Sterling
- to Edinburgh every other Day in a crowded and uncomfortable Stage.” I
- perfectly agreed with her in her sentiments on the affair, and secretly
- blamed Sir Edward for thus sacrificing his Daughter's Pleasure for the
- sake of a ridiculous old woman whose folly in marrying so young a man
- ought to be punished. His Behaviour however was entirely of a peice
- with his general Character; for what could be expected from a man who
- possessed not the smallest atom of Sensibility, who scarcely knew the
- meaning of simpathy, and who actually snored--. Adeiu Laura.
- LETTER the 15th LAURA in continuation.
- When we arrived at the town where we were to Breakfast, I was determined
- to speak with Philander and Gustavus, and to that purpose as soon as
- I left the Carriage, I went to the Basket and tenderly enquired after
- their Health, expressing my fears of the uneasiness of their situation.
- At first they seemed rather confused at my appearance dreading no doubt
- that I might call them to account for the money which our Grandfather
- had left me and which they had unjustly deprived me of, but finding
- that I mentioned nothing of the Matter, they desired me to step into
- the Basket as we might there converse with greater ease. Accordingly I
- entered and whilst the rest of the party were devouring green tea and
- buttered toast, we feasted ourselves in a more refined and sentimental
- Manner by a confidential Conversation. I informed them of every thing
- which had befallen me during the course of my life, and at my request
- they related to me every incident of theirs.
- “We are the sons as you already know, of the two youngest Daughters
- which Lord St Clair had by Laurina an italian opera girl. Our mothers
- could neither of them exactly ascertain who were our Father, though it
- is generally beleived that Philander, is the son of one Philip Jones
- a Bricklayer and that my Father was one Gregory Staves a Staymaker of
- Edinburgh. This is however of little consequence for as our Mothers were
- certainly never married to either of them it reflects no Dishonour on
- our Blood, which is of a most ancient and unpolluted kind. Bertha (the
- Mother of Philander) and Agatha (my own Mother) always lived together.
- They were neither of them very rich; their united fortunes had
- originally amounted to nine thousand Pounds, but as they had always
- lived on the principal of it, when we were fifteen it was diminished to
- nine Hundred. This nine Hundred they always kept in a Drawer in one
- of the Tables which stood in our common sitting Parlour, for the
- convenience of having it always at Hand. Whether it was from this
- circumstance, of its being easily taken, or from a wish of being
- independant, or from an excess of sensibility (for which we were always
- remarkable) I cannot now determine, but certain it is that when we had
- reached our 15th year, we took the nine Hundred Pounds and ran away.
- Having obtained this prize we were determined to manage it with eoconomy
- and not to spend it either with folly or Extravagance. To this purpose
- we therefore divided it into nine parcels, one of which we devoted to
- Victuals, the 2d to Drink, the 3d to Housekeeping, the 4th to Carriages,
- the 5th to Horses, the 6th to Servants, the 7th to Amusements, the 8th
- to Cloathes and the 9th to Silver Buckles. Having thus arranged our
- Expences for two months (for we expected to make the nine Hundred Pounds
- last as long) we hastened to London and had the good luck to spend it in
- 7 weeks and a Day which was 6 Days sooner than we had intended. As soon
- as we had thus happily disencumbered ourselves from the weight of
- so much money, we began to think of returning to our Mothers, but
- accidentally hearing that they were both starved to Death, we gave over
- the design and determined to engage ourselves to some strolling Company
- of Players, as we had always a turn for the Stage. Accordingly we
- offered our services to one and were accepted; our Company was
- indeed rather small, as it consisted only of the Manager his wife
- and ourselves, but there were fewer to pay and the only inconvenience
- attending it was the Scarcity of Plays which for want of People to fill
- the Characters, we could perform. We did not mind trifles however--.
- One of our most admired Performances was MACBETH, in which we were
- truly great. The Manager always played BANQUO himself, his Wife my LADY
- MACBETH. I did the THREE WITCHES and Philander acted ALL THE REST. To
- say the truth this tragedy was not only the Best, but the only Play
- that we ever performed; and after having acted it all over England, and
- Wales, we came to Scotland to exhibit it over the remainder of Great
- Britain. We happened to be quartered in that very Town, where you came
- and met your Grandfather--. We were in the Inn-yard when his Carriage
- entered and perceiving by the arms to whom it belonged, and knowing
- that Lord St Clair was our Grandfather, we agreed to endeavour to get
- something from him by discovering the Relationship--. You know how well
- it succeeded--. Having obtained the two Hundred Pounds, we instantly
- left the Town, leaving our Manager and his Wife to act MACBETH by
- themselves, and took the road to Sterling, where we spent our little
- fortune with great ECLAT. We are now returning to Edinburgh in order to
- get some preferment in the Acting way; and such my Dear Cousin is our
- History.”
- I thanked the amiable Youth for his entertaining narration, and after
- expressing my wishes for their Welfare and Happiness, left them in
- their little Habitation and returned to my other Freinds who impatiently
- expected me.
- My adventures are now drawing to a close my dearest Marianne; at least
- for the present.
- When we arrived at Edinburgh Sir Edward told me that as the Widow of his
- son, he desired I would accept from his Hands of four Hundred a year. I
- graciously promised that I would, but could not help observing that the
- unsimpathetic Baronet offered it more on account of my being the Widow
- of Edward than in being the refined and amiable Laura.
- I took up my Residence in a Romantic Village in the Highlands
- of Scotland where I have ever since continued, and where I can
- uninterrupted by unmeaning Visits, indulge in a melancholy solitude, my
- unceasing Lamentations for the Death of my Father, my Mother, my Husband
- and my Freind.
- Augusta has been for several years united to Graham the Man of all
- others most suited to her; she became acquainted with him during her
- stay in Scotland.
- Sir Edward in hopes of gaining an Heir to his Title and Estate, at the
- same time married Lady Dorothea--. His wishes have been answered.
- Philander and Gustavus, after having raised their reputation by their
- Performances in the Theatrical Line at Edinburgh, removed to Covent
- Garden, where they still exhibit under the assumed names of LUVIS and
- QUICK.
- Philippa has long paid the Debt of Nature, Her Husband however still
- continues to drive the Stage-Coach from Edinburgh to Sterling:--Adeiu my
- Dearest Marianne. Laura.
- Finis
- June 13th 1790.
- *****
- AN UNFINISHED NOVEL IN LETTERS
- To HENRY THOMAS AUSTEN Esqre.
- Sir
- I am now availing myself of the Liberty you have frequently honoured
- me with of dedicating one of my Novels to you. That it is unfinished, I
- greive; yet fear that from me, it will always remain so; that as far
- as it is carried, it should be so trifling and so unworthy of you, is
- another concern to your obliged humble Servant
- The Author
- Messrs Demand and Co--please to pay Jane Austen Spinster the sum of one
- hundred guineas on account of your Humble Servant.
- H. T. Austen
- L105. 0. 0.
- *****
- LESLEY CASTLE
- LETTER the FIRST is from Miss MARGARET LESLEY to Miss CHARLOTTE
- LUTTERELL. Lesley Castle Janry 3rd--1792.
- My Brother has just left us. “Matilda (said he at parting) you and
- Margaret will I am certain take all the care of my dear little one, that
- she might have received from an indulgent, and affectionate and amiable
- Mother.” Tears rolled down his cheeks as he spoke these words--the
- remembrance of her, who had so wantonly disgraced the Maternal character
- and so openly violated the conjugal Duties, prevented his adding
- anything farther; he embraced his sweet Child and after saluting Matilda
- and Me hastily broke from us and seating himself in his Chaise, pursued
- the road to Aberdeen. Never was there a better young Man! Ah! how little
- did he deserve the misfortunes he has experienced in the Marriage state.
- So good a Husband to so bad a Wife! for you know my dear Charlotte that
- the Worthless Louisa left him, her Child and reputation a few weeks ago
- in company with Danvers and dishonour. Never was there a sweeter face, a
- finer form, or a less amiable Heart than Louisa owned! Her child already
- possesses the personal Charms of her unhappy Mother! May she inherit
- from her Father all his mental ones! Lesley is at present but five and
- twenty, and has already given himself up to melancholy and Despair;
- what a difference between him and his Father! Sir George is 57 and still
- remains the Beau, the flighty stripling, the gay Lad, and sprightly
- Youngster, that his Son was really about five years back, and that HE
- has affected to appear ever since my remembrance. While our father is
- fluttering about the streets of London, gay, dissipated, and Thoughtless
- at the age of 57, Matilda and I continue secluded from Mankind in our
- old and Mouldering Castle, which is situated two miles from Perth on a
- bold projecting Rock, and commands an extensive veiw of the Town and its
- delightful Environs. But tho' retired from almost all the World, (for
- we visit no one but the M'Leods, The M'Kenzies, the M'Phersons, the
- M'Cartneys, the M'Donalds, The M'kinnons, the M'lellans, the M'kays,
- the Macbeths and the Macduffs) we are neither dull nor unhappy; on the
- contrary there never were two more lively, more agreable or more witty
- girls, than we are; not an hour in the Day hangs heavy on our Hands. We
- read, we work, we walk, and when fatigued with these Employments releive
- our spirits, either by a lively song, a graceful Dance, or by some smart
- bon-mot, and witty repartee. We are handsome my dear Charlotte, very
- handsome and the greatest of our Perfections is, that we are entirely
- insensible of them ourselves. But why do I thus dwell on myself! Let me
- rather repeat the praise of our dear little Neice the innocent Louisa,
- who is at present sweetly smiling in a gentle Nap, as she reposes on the
- sofa. The dear Creature is just turned of two years old; as handsome as
- tho' 2 and 20, as sensible as tho' 2 and 30, and as prudent as tho' 2
- and 40. To convince you of this, I must inform you that she has a very
- fine complexion and very pretty features, that she already knows the two
- first letters in the Alphabet, and that she never tears her frocks--. If
- I have not now convinced you of her Beauty, Sense and Prudence, I have
- nothing more to urge in support of my assertion, and you will therefore
- have no way of deciding the Affair but by coming to Lesley-Castle, and
- by a personal acquaintance with Louisa, determine for yourself. Ah! my
- dear Freind, how happy should I be to see you within these venerable
- Walls! It is now four years since my removal from School has separated
- me from you; that two such tender Hearts, so closely linked together by
- the ties of simpathy and Freindship, should be so widely removed from
- each other, is vastly moving. I live in Perthshire, You in Sussex. We
- might meet in London, were my Father disposed to carry me there, and
- were your Mother to be there at the same time. We might meet at Bath,
- at Tunbridge, or anywhere else indeed, could we but be at the same place
- together. We have only to hope that such a period may arrive. My Father
- does not return to us till Autumn; my Brother will leave Scotland in a
- few Days; he is impatient to travel. Mistaken Youth! He vainly flatters
- himself that change of Air will heal the Wounds of a broken Heart! You
- will join with me I am certain my dear Charlotte, in prayers for the
- recovery of the unhappy Lesley's peace of Mind, which must ever be
- essential to that of your sincere freind M. Lesley.
- LETTER the SECOND From Miss C. LUTTERELL to Miss M. LESLEY in answer.
- Glenford Febry 12
- I have a thousand excuses to beg for having so long delayed thanking you
- my dear Peggy for your agreable Letter, which beleive me I should not
- have deferred doing, had not every moment of my time during the last
- five weeks been so fully employed in the necessary arrangements for
- my sisters wedding, as to allow me no time to devote either to you or
- myself. And now what provokes me more than anything else is that the
- Match is broke off, and all my Labour thrown away. Imagine how great
- the Dissapointment must be to me, when you consider that after having
- laboured both by Night and by Day, in order to get the Wedding dinner
- ready by the time appointed, after having roasted Beef, Broiled Mutton,
- and Stewed Soup enough to last the new-married Couple through the
- Honey-moon, I had the mortification of finding that I had been Roasting,
- Broiling and Stewing both the Meat and Myself to no purpose. Indeed my
- dear Freind, I never remember suffering any vexation equal to what I
- experienced on last Monday when my sister came running to me in the
- store-room with her face as White as a Whipt syllabub, and told me that
- Hervey had been thrown from his Horse, had fractured his Scull and was
- pronounced by his surgeon to be in the most emminent Danger. “Good God!
- (said I) you dont say so? Why what in the name of Heaven will become
- of all the Victuals! We shall never be able to eat it while it is good.
- However, we'll call in the Surgeon to help us. I shall be able to manage
- the Sir-loin myself, my Mother will eat the soup, and You and the Doctor
- must finish the rest.” Here I was interrupted, by seeing my poor Sister
- fall down to appearance Lifeless upon one of the Chests, where we keep
- our Table linen. I immediately called my Mother and the Maids, and at
- last we brought her to herself again; as soon as ever she was sensible,
- she expressed a determination of going instantly to Henry, and was so
- wildly bent on this Scheme, that we had the greatest Difficulty in the
- World to prevent her putting it in execution; at last however more by
- Force than Entreaty we prevailed on her to go into her room; we laid
- her upon the Bed, and she continued for some Hours in the most dreadful
- Convulsions. My Mother and I continued in the room with her, and when
- any intervals of tolerable Composure in Eloisa would allow us, we joined
- in heartfelt lamentations on the dreadful Waste in our provisions which
- this Event must occasion, and in concerting some plan for getting rid of
- them. We agreed that the best thing we could do was to begin eating them
- immediately, and accordingly we ordered up the cold Ham and Fowls, and
- instantly began our Devouring Plan on them with great Alacrity. We would
- have persuaded Eloisa to have taken a Wing of a Chicken, but she would
- not be persuaded. She was however much quieter than she had been;
- the convulsions she had before suffered having given way to an almost
- perfect Insensibility. We endeavoured to rouse her by every means in our
- power, but to no purpose. I talked to her of Henry. “Dear Eloisa (said
- I) there's no occasion for your crying so much about such a trifle. (for
- I was willing to make light of it in order to comfort her) I beg you
- would not mind it--You see it does not vex me in the least; though
- perhaps I may suffer most from it after all; for I shall not only be
- obliged to eat up all the Victuals I have dressed already, but must if
- Henry should recover (which however is not very likely) dress as much
- for you again; or should he die (as I suppose he will) I shall still
- have to prepare a Dinner for you whenever you marry any one else. So
- you see that tho' perhaps for the present it may afflict you to think
- of Henry's sufferings, Yet I dare say he'll die soon, and then his pain
- will be over and you will be easy, whereas my Trouble will last much
- longer for work as hard as I may, I am certain that the pantry cannot be
- cleared in less than a fortnight.” Thus I did all in my power to console
- her, but without any effect, and at last as I saw that she did not seem
- to listen to me, I said no more, but leaving her with my Mother I took
- down the remains of The Ham and Chicken, and sent William to ask how
- Henry did. He was not expected to live many Hours; he died the same day.
- We took all possible care to break the melancholy Event to Eloisa in the
- tenderest manner; yet in spite of every precaution, her sufferings on
- hearing it were too violent for her reason, and she continued for many
- hours in a high Delirium. She is still extremely ill, and her Physicians
- are greatly afraid of her going into a Decline. We are therefore
- preparing for Bristol, where we mean to be in the course of the next
- week. And now my dear Margaret let me talk a little of your affairs; and
- in the first place I must inform you that it is confidently reported,
- your Father is going to be married; I am very unwilling to beleive so
- unpleasing a report, and at the same time cannot wholly discredit it. I
- have written to my freind Susan Fitzgerald, for information concerning
- it, which as she is at present in Town, she will be very able to give
- me. I know not who is the Lady. I think your Brother is extremely
- right in the resolution he has taken of travelling, as it will perhaps
- contribute to obliterate from his remembrance, those disagreable Events,
- which have lately so much afflicted him--I am happy to find that
- tho' secluded from all the World, neither you nor Matilda are dull or
- unhappy--that you may never know what it is to, be either is the wish of
- your sincerely affectionate C.L.
- P. S. I have this instant received an answer from my freind Susan, which
- I enclose to you, and on which you will make your own reflections.
- The enclosed LETTER
- My dear CHARLOTTE You could not have applied for information concerning
- the report of Sir George Lesleys Marriage, to any one better able to
- give it you than I am. Sir George is certainly married; I was myself
- present at the Ceremony, which you will not be surprised at when I
- subscribe myself your Affectionate Susan Lesley
- LETTER the THIRD From Miss MARGARET LESLEY to Miss C. LUTTERELL Lesley
- Castle February the 16th
- I have made my own reflections on the letter you enclosed to me, my
- Dear Charlotte and I will now tell you what those reflections were.
- I reflected that if by this second Marriage Sir George should have a
- second family, our fortunes must be considerably diminushed--that if
- his Wife should be of an extravagant turn, she would encourage him
- to persevere in that gay and Dissipated way of Life to which little
- encouragement would be necessary, and which has I fear already proved
- but too detrimental to his health and fortune--that she would now become
- Mistress of those Jewels which once adorned our Mother, and which Sir
- George had always promised us--that if they did not come into
- Perthshire I should not be able to gratify my curiosity of beholding my
- Mother-in-law and that if they did, Matilda would no longer sit at
- the head of her Father's table--. These my dear Charlotte were the
- melancholy reflections which crowded into my imagination after perusing
- Susan's letter to you, and which instantly occurred to Matilda when she
- had perused it likewise. The same ideas, the same fears, immediately
- occupied her Mind, and I know not which reflection distressed her most,
- whether the probable Diminution of our Fortunes, or her own Consequence.
- We both wish very much to know whether Lady Lesley is handsome and what
- is your opinion of her; as you honour her with the appellation of your
- freind, we flatter ourselves that she must be amiable. My Brother is
- already in Paris. He intends to quit it in a few Days, and to begin his
- route to Italy. He writes in a most chearfull manner, says that the air
- of France has greatly recovered both his Health and Spirits; that he has
- now entirely ceased to think of Louisa with any degree either of Pity or
- Affection, that he even feels himself obliged to her for her Elopement,
- as he thinks it very good fun to be single again. By this, you may
- perceive that he has entirely regained that chearful Gaiety, and
- sprightly Wit, for which he was once so remarkable. When he first became
- acquainted with Louisa which was little more than three years ago, he
- was one of the most lively, the most agreable young Men of the age--.
- I beleive you never yet heard the particulars of his first acquaintance
- with her. It commenced at our cousin Colonel Drummond's; at whose house
- in Cumberland he spent the Christmas, in which he attained the age of
- two and twenty. Louisa Burton was the Daughter of a distant Relation of
- Mrs. Drummond, who dieing a few Months before in extreme poverty, left
- his only Child then about eighteen to the protection of any of his
- Relations who would protect her. Mrs. Drummond was the only one who
- found herself so disposed--Louisa was therefore removed from a miserable
- Cottage in Yorkshire to an elegant Mansion in Cumberland, and from
- every pecuniary Distress that Poverty could inflict, to every elegant
- Enjoyment that Money could purchase--. Louisa was naturally ill-tempered
- and Cunning; but she had been taught to disguise her real Disposition,
- under the appearance of insinuating Sweetness, by a father who but too
- well knew, that to be married, would be the only chance she would
- have of not being starved, and who flattered himself that with such
- an extroidinary share of personal beauty, joined to a gentleness of
- Manners, and an engaging address, she might stand a good chance of
- pleasing some young Man who might afford to marry a girl without a
- Shilling. Louisa perfectly entered into her father's schemes and was
- determined to forward them with all her care and attention. By dint of
- Perseverance and Application, she had at length so thoroughly disguised
- her natural disposition under the mask of Innocence, and Softness, as to
- impose upon every one who had not by a long and constant intimacy with
- her discovered her real Character. Such was Louisa when the hapless
- Lesley first beheld her at Drummond-house. His heart which (to use
- your favourite comparison) was as delicate as sweet and as tender as a
- Whipt-syllabub, could not resist her attractions. In a very few Days,
- he was falling in love, shortly after actually fell, and before he had
- known her a Month, he had married her. My Father was at first highly
- displeased at so hasty and imprudent a connection; but when he found
- that they did not mind it, he soon became perfectly reconciled to the
- match. The Estate near Aberdeen which my brother possesses by the bounty
- of his great Uncle independant of Sir George, was entirely sufficient
- to support him and my Sister in Elegance and Ease. For the first
- twelvemonth, no one could be happier than Lesley, and no one more
- amiable to appearance than Louisa, and so plausibly did she act and
- so cautiously behave that tho' Matilda and I often spent several weeks
- together with them, yet we neither of us had any suspicion of her real
- Disposition. After the birth of Louisa however, which one would have
- thought would have strengthened her regard for Lesley, the mask she had
- so long supported was by degrees thrown aside, and as probably she then
- thought herself secure in the affection of her Husband (which did indeed
- appear if possible augmented by the birth of his Child) she seemed
- to take no pains to prevent that affection from ever diminushing. Our
- visits therefore to Dunbeath, were now less frequent and by far less
- agreable than they used to be. Our absence was however never either
- mentioned or lamented by Louisa who in the society of young Danvers
- with whom she became acquainted at Aberdeen (he was at one of the
- Universities there,) felt infinitely happier than in that of Matilda and
- your freind, tho' there certainly never were pleasanter girls than we
- are. You know the sad end of all Lesleys connubial happiness; I will not
- repeat it--. Adeiu my dear Charlotte; although I have not yet mentioned
- anything of the matter, I hope you will do me the justice to beleive
- that I THINK and FEEL, a great deal for your Sisters affliction. I do
- not doubt but that the healthy air of the Bristol downs will intirely
- remove it, by erasing from her Mind the remembrance of Henry. I am my
- dear Charlotte yrs ever M. L.
- LETTER the FOURTH From Miss C. LUTTERELL to Miss M. LESLEY Bristol
- February 27th
- My Dear Peggy I have but just received your letter, which being directed
- to Sussex while I was at Bristol was obliged to be forwarded to me here,
- and from some unaccountable Delay, has but this instant reached me--.
- I return you many thanks for the account it contains of Lesley's
- acquaintance, Love and Marriage with Louisa, which has not the less
- entertained me for having often been repeated to me before.
- I have the satisfaction of informing you that we have every reason to
- imagine our pantry is by this time nearly cleared, as we left Particular
- orders with the servants to eat as hard as they possibly could, and to
- call in a couple of Chairwomen to assist them. We brought a cold Pigeon
- pye, a cold turkey, a cold tongue, and half a dozen Jellies with us,
- which we were lucky enough with the help of our Landlady, her husband,
- and their three children, to get rid of, in less than two days after
- our arrival. Poor Eloisa is still so very indifferent both in Health and
- Spirits, that I very much fear, the air of the Bristol downs, healthy as
- it is, has not been able to drive poor Henry from her remembrance.
- You ask me whether your new Mother in law is handsome and amiable--I
- will now give you an exact description of her bodily and mental charms.
- She is short, and extremely well made; is naturally pale, but rouges a
- good deal; has fine eyes, and fine teeth, as she will take care to let
- you know as soon as she sees you, and is altogether very pretty. She is
- remarkably good-tempered when she has her own way, and very lively when
- she is not out of humour. She is naturally extravagant and not very
- affected; she never reads anything but the letters she receives from me,
- and never writes anything but her answers to them. She plays, sings and
- Dances, but has no taste for either, and excells in none, tho' she says
- she is passionately fond of all. Perhaps you may flatter me so far as to
- be surprised that one of whom I speak with so little affection should
- be my particular freind; but to tell you the truth, our freindship arose
- rather from Caprice on her side than Esteem on mine. We spent two or
- three days together with a Lady in Berkshire with whom we both happened
- to be connected--. During our visit, the Weather being remarkably bad,
- and our party particularly stupid, she was so good as to conceive
- a violent partiality for me, which very soon settled in a downright
- Freindship and ended in an established correspondence. She is probably
- by this time as tired of me, as I am of her; but as she is too Polite
- and I am too civil to say so, our letters are still as frequent and
- affectionate as ever, and our Attachment as firm and sincere as when it
- first commenced. As she had a great taste for the pleasures of London,
- and of Brighthelmstone, she will I dare say find some difficulty in
- prevailing on herself even to satisfy the curiosity I dare say she feels
- of beholding you, at the expence of quitting those favourite haunts of
- Dissipation, for the melancholy tho' venerable gloom of the castle you
- inhabit. Perhaps however if she finds her health impaired by too much
- amusement, she may acquire fortitude sufficient to undertake a Journey
- to Scotland in the hope of its Proving at least beneficial to her
- health, if not conducive to her happiness. Your fears I am sorry to say,
- concerning your father's extravagance, your own fortunes, your Mothers
- Jewels and your Sister's consequence, I should suppose are but too well
- founded. My freind herself has four thousand pounds, and will probably
- spend nearly as much every year in Dress and Public places, if she can
- get it--she will certainly not endeavour to reclaim Sir George from the
- manner of living to which he has been so long accustomed, and there is
- therefore some reason to fear that you will be very well off, if you get
- any fortune at all. The Jewels I should imagine too will undoubtedly be
- hers, and there is too much reason to think that she will preside at
- her Husbands table in preference to his Daughter. But as so melancholy a
- subject must necessarily extremely distress you, I will no longer dwell
- on it--.
- Eloisa's indisposition has brought us to Bristol at so unfashionable a
- season of the year, that we have actually seen but one genteel family
- since we came. Mr and Mrs Marlowe are very agreable people; the ill
- health of their little boy occasioned their arrival here; you may
- imagine that being the only family with whom we can converse, we are
- of course on a footing of intimacy with them; we see them indeed almost
- every day, and dined with them yesterday. We spent a very pleasant
- Day, and had a very good Dinner, tho' to be sure the Veal was terribly
- underdone, and the Curry had no seasoning. I could not help wishing
- all dinner-time that I had been at the dressing it--. A brother of Mrs
- Marlowe, Mr Cleveland is with them at present; he is a good-looking
- young Man, and seems to have a good deal to say for himself. I tell
- Eloisa that she should set her cap at him, but she does not at all
- seem to relish the proposal. I should like to see the girl married and
- Cleveland has a very good estate. Perhaps you may wonder that I do not
- consider myself as well as my Sister in my matrimonial Projects; but
- to tell you the truth I never wish to act a more principal part at a
- Wedding than the superintending and directing the Dinner, and therefore
- while I can get any of my acquaintance to marry for me, I shall never
- think of doing it myself, as I very much suspect that I should not have
- so much time for dressing my own Wedding-dinner, as for dressing that of
- my freinds. Yours sincerely C. L.
- LETTER the FIFTH Miss MARGARET LESLEY to Miss CHARLOTTE LUTTERELL
- Lesley-Castle March 18th
- On the same day that I received your last kind letter, Matilda received
- one from Sir George which was dated from Edinburgh, and informed us that
- he should do himself the pleasure of introducing Lady Lesley to us on
- the following evening. This as you may suppose considerably surprised
- us, particularly as your account of her Ladyship had given us reason to
- imagine there was little chance of her visiting Scotland at a time that
- London must be so gay. As it was our business however to be delighted at
- such a mark of condescension as a visit from Sir George and Lady Lesley,
- we prepared to return them an answer expressive of the happiness we
- enjoyed in expectation of such a Blessing, when luckily recollecting
- that as they were to reach the Castle the next Evening, it would be
- impossible for my father to receive it before he left Edinburgh, we
- contented ourselves with leaving them to suppose that we were as happy
- as we ought to be. At nine in the Evening on the following day,
- they came, accompanied by one of Lady Lesleys brothers. Her Ladyship
- perfectly answers the description you sent me of her, except that I do
- not think her so pretty as you seem to consider her. She has not a
- bad face, but there is something so extremely unmajestic in her little
- diminutive figure, as to render her in comparison with the elegant
- height of Matilda and Myself, an insignificant Dwarf. Her curiosity to
- see us (which must have been great to bring her more than four hundred
- miles) being now perfectly gratified, she already begins to mention
- their return to town, and has desired us to accompany her. We cannot
- refuse her request since it is seconded by the commands of our Father,
- and thirded by the entreaties of Mr. Fitzgerald who is certainly one
- of the most pleasing young Men, I ever beheld. It is not yet determined
- when we are to go, but when ever we do we shall certainly take our
- little Louisa with us. Adeiu my dear Charlotte; Matilda unites in best
- wishes to you, and Eloisa, with yours ever M. L.
- LETTER the SIXTH LADY LESLEY to Miss CHARLOTTE LUTTERELL Lesley-Castle
- March 20th
- We arrived here my sweet Freind about a fortnight ago, and I already
- heartily repent that I ever left our charming House in Portman-square
- for such a dismal old weather-beaten Castle as this. You can form no
- idea sufficiently hideous, of its dungeon-like form. It is actually
- perched upon a Rock to appearance so totally inaccessible, that I
- expected to have been pulled up by a rope; and sincerely repented having
- gratified my curiosity to behold my Daughters at the expence of being
- obliged to enter their prison in so dangerous and ridiculous a manner.
- But as soon as I once found myself safely arrived in the inside of
- this tremendous building, I comforted myself with the hope of having my
- spirits revived, by the sight of two beautifull girls, such as the Miss
- Lesleys had been represented to me, at Edinburgh. But here again, I
- met with nothing but Disappointment and Surprise. Matilda and Margaret
- Lesley are two great, tall, out of the way, over-grown, girls, just of
- a proper size to inhabit a Castle almost as large in comparison as
- themselves. I wish my dear Charlotte that you could but behold these
- Scotch giants; I am sure they would frighten you out of your wits.
- They will do very well as foils to myself, so I have invited them to
- accompany me to London where I hope to be in the course of a fortnight.
- Besides these two fair Damsels, I found a little humoured Brat here who
- I beleive is some relation to them, they told me who she was, and gave
- me a long rigmerole story of her father and a Miss SOMEBODY which I have
- entirely forgot. I hate scandal and detest Children. I have been plagued
- ever since I came here with tiresome visits from a parcel of Scotch
- wretches, with terrible hard-names; they were so civil, gave me so many
- invitations, and talked of coming again so soon, that I could not help
- affronting them. I suppose I shall not see them any more, and yet as
- a family party we are so stupid, that I do not know what to do with
- myself. These girls have no Music, but Scotch airs, no Drawings but
- Scotch Mountains, and no Books but Scotch Poems--and I hate everything
- Scotch. In general I can spend half the Day at my toilett with a great
- deal of pleasure, but why should I dress here, since there is not a
- creature in the House whom I have any wish to please. I have just had
- a conversation with my Brother in which he has greatly offended me, and
- which as I have nothing more entertaining to send you I will gave you
- the particulars of. You must know that I have for these 4 or 5 Days past
- strongly suspected William of entertaining a partiality to my eldest
- Daughter. I own indeed that had I been inclined to fall in love with any
- woman, I should not have made choice of Matilda Lesley for the object
- of my passion; for there is nothing I hate so much as a tall Woman: but
- however there is no accounting for some men's taste and as William is
- himself nearly six feet high, it is not wonderful that he should be
- partial to that height. Now as I have a very great affection for my
- Brother and should be extremely sorry to see him unhappy, which I
- suppose he means to be if he cannot marry Matilda, as moreover I know
- that his circumstances will not allow him to marry any one without a
- fortune, and that Matilda's is entirely dependant on her Father, who
- will neither have his own inclination nor my permission to give her
- anything at present, I thought it would be doing a good-natured action
- by my Brother to let him know as much, in order that he might choose
- for himself, whether to conquer his passion, or Love and Despair.
- Accordingly finding myself this Morning alone with him in one of the
- horrid old rooms of this Castle, I opened the cause to him in the
- following Manner.
- “Well my dear William what do you think of these girls? for my part, I
- do not find them so plain as I expected: but perhaps you may think me
- partial to the Daughters of my Husband and perhaps you are right--They
- are indeed so very like Sir George that it is natural to think”--
- “My Dear Susan (cried he in a tone of the greatest amazement) You do not
- really think they bear the least resemblance to their Father! He is so
- very plain!--but I beg your pardon--I had entirely forgotten to whom I
- was speaking--”
- “Oh! pray dont mind me; (replied I) every one knows Sir George is
- horribly ugly, and I assure you I always thought him a fright.”
- “You surprise me extremely (answered William) by what you say both with
- respect to Sir George and his Daughters. You cannot think your Husband
- so deficient in personal Charms as you speak of, nor can you surely see
- any resemblance between him and the Miss Lesleys who are in my opinion
- perfectly unlike him and perfectly Handsome.”
- “If that is your opinion with regard to the girls it certainly is no
- proof of their Fathers beauty, for if they are perfectly unlike him and
- very handsome at the same time, it is natural to suppose that he is very
- plain.”
- “By no means, (said he) for what may be pretty in a Woman, may be very
- unpleasing in a Man.”
- “But you yourself (replied I) but a few minutes ago allowed him to be
- very plain.”
- “Men are no Judges of Beauty in their own Sex.” (said he).
- “Neither Men nor Women can think Sir George tolerable.”
- “Well, well, (said he) we will not dispute about HIS Beauty, but your
- opinion of his DAUGHTERS is surely very singular, for if I understood
- you right, you said you did not find them so plain as you expected to
- do!”
- “Why, do YOU find them plainer then?” (said I).
- “I can scarcely beleive you to be serious (returned he) when you speak
- of their persons in so extroidinary a Manner. Do not you think the Miss
- Lesleys are two very handsome young Women?”
- “Lord! No! (cried I) I think them terribly plain!”
- “Plain! (replied He) My dear Susan, you cannot really think so! Why
- what single Feature in the face of either of them, can you possibly find
- fault with?”
- “Oh! trust me for that; (replied I). Come I will begin with the
- eldest--with Matilda. Shall I, William?” (I looked as cunning as I could
- when I said it, in order to shame him).
- “They are so much alike (said he) that I should suppose the faults of
- one, would be the faults of both.”
- “Well, then, in the first place; they are both so horribly tall!”
- “They are TALLER than you are indeed.” (said he with a saucy smile.)
- “Nay, (said I), I know nothing of that.”
- “Well, but (he continued) tho' they may be above the common size, their
- figures are perfectly elegant; and as to their faces, their Eyes are
- beautifull.”
- “I never can think such tremendous, knock-me-down figures in the least
- degree elegant, and as for their eyes, they are so tall that I never
- could strain my neck enough to look at them.”
- “Nay, (replied he) I know not whether you may not be in the right in not
- attempting it, for perhaps they might dazzle you with their Lustre.”
- “Oh! Certainly. (said I, with the greatest complacency, for I assure
- you my dearest Charlotte I was not in the least offended tho' by what
- followed, one would suppose that William was conscious of having given
- me just cause to be so, for coming up to me and taking my hand, he said)
- “You must not look so grave Susan; you will make me fear I have offended
- you!”
- “Offended me! Dear Brother, how came such a thought in your head!
- (returned I) No really! I assure you that I am not in the least
- surprised at your being so warm an advocate for the Beauty of these
- girls.”--
- “Well, but (interrupted William) remember that we have not yet
- concluded our dispute concerning them. What fault do you find with their
- complexion?”
- “They are so horridly pale.”
- “They have always a little colour, and after any exercise it is
- considerably heightened.”
- “Yes, but if there should ever happen to be any rain in this part of
- the world, they will never be able raise more than their common
- stock--except indeed they amuse themselves with running up and Down
- these horrid old galleries and Antichambers.”
- “Well, (replied my Brother in a tone of vexation, and glancing an
- impertinent look at me) if they HAVE but little colour, at least, it is
- all their own.”
- This was too much my dear Charlotte, for I am certain that he had the
- impudence by that look, of pretending to suspect the reality of mine.
- But you I am sure will vindicate my character whenever you may hear
- it so cruelly aspersed, for you can witness how often I have protested
- against wearing Rouge, and how much I always told you I disliked it. And
- I assure you that my opinions are still the same.--. Well, not bearing
- to be so suspected by my Brother, I left the room immediately, and have
- been ever since in my own Dressing-room writing to you. What a long
- letter have I made of it! But you must not expect to receive such from
- me when I get to Town; for it is only at Lesley castle, that one has
- time to write even to a Charlotte Lutterell.--. I was so much vexed by
- William's glance, that I could not summon Patience enough, to stay and
- give him that advice respecting his attachment to Matilda which had
- first induced me from pure Love to him to begin the conversation; and
- I am now so thoroughly convinced by it, of his violent passion for her,
- that I am certain he would never hear reason on the subject, and I
- shall there fore give myself no more trouble either about him or his
- favourite. Adeiu my dear girl--Yrs affectionately Susan L.
- LETTER the SEVENTH From Miss C. LUTTERELL to Miss M. LESLEY Bristol the
- 27th of March
- I have received Letters from you and your Mother-in-law within this week
- which have greatly entertained me, as I find by them that you are both
- downright jealous of each others Beauty. It is very odd that two pretty
- Women tho' actually Mother and Daughter cannot be in the same House
- without falling out about their faces. Do be convinced that you are both
- perfectly handsome and say no more of the Matter. I suppose this letter
- must be directed to Portman Square where probably (great as is your
- affection for Lesley Castle) you will not be sorry to find yourself. In
- spite of all that people may say about Green fields and the Country
- I was always of opinion that London and its amusements must be very
- agreable for a while, and should be very happy could my Mother's income
- allow her to jockey us into its Public-places, during Winter. I always
- longed particularly to go to Vaux-hall, to see whether the cold Beef
- there is cut so thin as it is reported, for I have a sly suspicion that
- few people understand the art of cutting a slice of cold Beef so well
- as I do: nay it would be hard if I did not know something of the Matter,
- for it was a part of my Education that I took by far the most pains
- with. Mama always found me HER best scholar, tho' when Papa was
- alive Eloisa was HIS. Never to be sure were there two more different
- Dispositions in the World. We both loved Reading. SHE preferred
- Histories, and I Receipts. She loved drawing, Pictures, and I drawing
- Pullets. No one could sing a better song than she, and no one make a
- better Pye than I.--And so it has always continued since we have been
- no longer children. The only difference is that all disputes on the
- superior excellence of our Employments THEN so frequent are now no more.
- We have for many years entered into an agreement always to admire
- each other's works; I never fail listening to HER Music, and she is as
- constant in eating my pies. Such at least was the case till Henry Hervey
- made his appearance in Sussex. Before the arrival of his Aunt in our
- neighbourhood where she established herself you know about a twelvemonth
- ago, his visits to her had been at stated times, and of equal and
- settled Duration; but on her removal to the Hall which is within a walk
- from our House, they became both more frequent and longer. This as you
- may suppose could not be pleasing to Mrs Diana who is a professed enemy
- to everything which is not directed by Decorum and Formality, or which
- bears the least resemblance to Ease and Good-breeding. Nay so great was
- her aversion to her Nephews behaviour that I have often heard her give
- such hints of it before his face that had not Henry at such times been
- engaged in conversation with Eloisa, they must have caught his Attention
- and have very much distressed him. The alteration in my Sisters
- behaviour which I have before hinted at, now took place. The Agreement
- we had entered into of admiring each others productions she no
- longer seemed to regard, and tho' I constantly applauded even every
- Country-dance, she played, yet not even a pidgeon-pye of my making could
- obtain from her a single word of approbation. This was certainly enough
- to put any one in a Passion; however, I was as cool as a cream-cheese
- and having formed my plan and concerted a scheme of Revenge, I was
- determined to let her have her own way and not even to make her a single
- reproach. My scheme was to treat her as she treated me, and tho' she
- might even draw my own Picture or play Malbrook (which is the only tune
- I ever really liked) not to say so much as “Thank you Eloisa;” tho'
- I had for many years constantly hollowed whenever she played, BRAVO,
- BRAVISSIMO, ENCORE, DA CAPO, ALLEGRETTO, CON EXPRESSIONE, and POCO
- PRESTO with many other such outlandish words, all of them as Eloisa told
- me expressive of my Admiration; and so indeed I suppose they are, as I
- see some of them in every Page of every Music book, being the sentiments
- I imagine of the composer.
- I executed my Plan with great Punctuality. I can not say success, for
- alas! my silence while she played seemed not in the least to displease
- her; on the contrary she actually said to me one day “Well Charlotte,
- I am very glad to find that you have at last left off that ridiculous
- custom of applauding my Execution on the Harpsichord till you made
- my head ake, and yourself hoarse. I feel very much obliged to you for
- keeping your admiration to yourself.” I never shall forget the very
- witty answer I made to this speech. “Eloisa (said I) I beg you would
- be quite at your Ease with respect to all such fears in future, for
- be assured that I shall always keep my admiration to myself and my own
- pursuits and never extend it to yours.” This was the only very severe
- thing I ever said in my Life; not but that I have often felt myself
- extremely satirical but it was the only time I ever made my feelings
- public.
- I suppose there never were two Young people who had a greater affection
- for each other than Henry and Eloisa; no, the Love of your Brother for
- Miss Burton could not be so strong tho' it might be more violent. You
- may imagine therefore how provoked my Sister must have been to have
- him play her such a trick. Poor girl! she still laments his Death with
- undiminished constancy, notwithstanding he has been dead more than six
- weeks; but some People mind such things more than others. The ill state
- of Health into which his loss has thrown her makes her so weak, and so
- unable to support the least exertion, that she has been in tears all
- this Morning merely from having taken leave of Mrs. Marlowe who with her
- Husband, Brother and Child are to leave Bristol this morning. I am sorry
- to have them go because they are the only family with whom we have here
- any acquaintance, but I never thought of crying; to be sure Eloisa
- and Mrs Marlowe have always been more together than with me, and have
- therefore contracted a kind of affection for each other, which does not
- make Tears so inexcusable in them as they would be in me. The Marlowes
- are going to Town; Cliveland accompanies them; as neither Eloisa nor I
- could catch him I hope you or Matilda may have better Luck. I know not
- when we shall leave Bristol, Eloisa's spirits are so low that she is
- very averse to moving, and yet is certainly by no means mended by her
- residence here. A week or two will I hope determine our Measures--in the
- mean time believe me and etc--and etc--Charlotte Lutterell.
- LETTER the EIGHTH Miss LUTTERELL to Mrs MARLOWE Bristol April 4th
- I feel myself greatly obliged to you my dear Emma for such a mark of
- your affection as I flatter myself was conveyed in the proposal you made
- me of our Corresponding; I assure you that it will be a great releif to
- me to write to you and as long as my Health and Spirits will allow
- me, you will find me a very constant correspondent; I will not say
- an entertaining one, for you know my situation suffciently not to be
- ignorant that in me Mirth would be improper and I know my own Heart too
- well not to be sensible that it would be unnatural. You must not expect
- news for we see no one with whom we are in the least acquainted, or in
- whose proceedings we have any Interest. You must not expect scandal
- for by the same rule we are equally debarred either from hearing or
- inventing it.--You must expect from me nothing but the melancholy
- effusions of a broken Heart which is ever reverting to the Happiness
- it once enjoyed and which ill supports its present wretchedness. The
- Possibility of being able to write, to speak, to you of my lost Henry
- will be a luxury to me, and your goodness will not I know refuse to read
- what it will so much releive my Heart to write. I once thought that to
- have what is in general called a Freind (I mean one of my own sex
- to whom I might speak with less reserve than to any other person)
- independant of my sister would never be an object of my wishes, but how
- much was I mistaken! Charlotte is too much engrossed by two confidential
- correspondents of that sort, to supply the place of one to me, and I
- hope you will not think me girlishly romantic, when I say that to
- have some kind and compassionate Freind who might listen to my sorrows
- without endeavouring to console me was what I had for some time wished
- for, when our acquaintance with you, the intimacy which followed it and
- the particular affectionate attention you paid me almost from the first,
- caused me to entertain the flattering Idea of those attentions being
- improved on a closer acquaintance into a Freindship which, if you were
- what my wishes formed you would be the greatest Happiness I could
- be capable of enjoying. To find that such Hopes are realised is a
- satisfaction indeed, a satisfaction which is now almost the only one I
- can ever experience.--I feel myself so languid that I am sure were you
- with me you would oblige me to leave off writing, and I cannot give you
- a greater proof of my affection for you than by acting, as I know you
- would wish me to do, whether Absent or Present. I am my dear Emmas
- sincere freind E. L.
- LETTER the NINTH Mrs MARLOWE to Miss LUTTERELL Grosvenor Street, April
- 10th
- Need I say my dear Eloisa how wellcome your letter was to me I cannot
- give a greater proof of the pleasure I received from it, or of the
- Desire I feel that our Correspondence may be regular and frequent than
- by setting you so good an example as I now do in answering it before the
- end of the week--. But do not imagine that I claim any merit in being
- so punctual; on the contrary I assure you, that it is a far greater
- Gratification to me to write to you, than to spend the Evening either at
- a Concert or a Ball. Mr Marlowe is so desirous of my appearing at some
- of the Public places every evening that I do not like to refuse him, but
- at the same time so much wish to remain at Home, that independant of
- the Pleasure I experience in devoting any portion of my Time to my
- Dear Eloisa, yet the Liberty I claim from having a letter to write of
- spending an Evening at home with my little Boy, you know me well enough
- to be sensible, will of itself be a sufficient Inducement (if one is
- necessary) to my maintaining with Pleasure a Correspondence with you.
- As to the subject of your letters to me, whether grave or merry, if they
- concern you they must be equally interesting to me; not but that I think
- the melancholy Indulgence of your own sorrows by repeating them and
- dwelling on them to me, will only encourage and increase them, and
- that it will be more prudent in you to avoid so sad a subject; but yet
- knowing as I do what a soothing and melancholy Pleasure it must afford
- you, I cannot prevail on myself to deny you so great an Indulgence, and
- will only insist on your not expecting me to encourage you in it, by my
- own letters; on the contrary I intend to fill them with such lively Wit
- and enlivening Humour as shall even provoke a smile in the sweet but
- sorrowfull countenance of my Eloisa.
- In the first place you are to learn that I have met your sisters three
- freinds Lady Lesley and her Daughters, twice in Public since I have been
- here. I know you will be impatient to hear my opinion of the Beauty of
- three Ladies of whom you have heard so much. Now, as you are too ill and
- too unhappy to be vain, I think I may venture to inform you that I
- like none of their faces so well as I do your own. Yet they are all
- handsome--Lady Lesley indeed I have seen before; her Daughters I beleive
- would in general be said to have a finer face than her Ladyship, and yet
- what with the charms of a Blooming complexion, a little Affectation and
- a great deal of small-talk, (in each of which she is superior to the
- young Ladies) she will I dare say gain herself as many admirers as the
- more regular features of Matilda, and Margaret. I am sure you will agree
- with me in saying that they can none of them be of a proper size for
- real Beauty, when you know that two of them are taller and the other
- shorter than ourselves. In spite of this Defect (or rather by reason
- of it) there is something very noble and majestic in the figures of the
- Miss Lesleys, and something agreably lively in the appearance of their
- pretty little Mother-in-law. But tho' one may be majestic and the other
- lively, yet the faces of neither possess that Bewitching sweetness of
- my Eloisas, which her present languor is so far from diminushing. What
- would my Husband and Brother say of us, if they knew all the fine things
- I have been saying to you in this letter. It is very hard that a pretty
- woman is never to be told she is so by any one of her own sex without
- that person's being suspected to be either her determined Enemy, or
- her professed Toad-eater. How much more amiable are women in that
- particular! One man may say forty civil things to another without our
- supposing that he is ever paid for it, and provided he does his Duty by
- our sex, we care not how Polite he is to his own.
- Mrs Lutterell will be so good as to accept my compliments, Charlotte,
- my Love, and Eloisa the best wishes for the recovery of her Health and
- Spirits that can be offered by her affectionate Freind E. Marlowe.
- I am afraid this letter will be but a poor specimen of my Powers in the
- witty way; and your opinion of them will not be greatly increased when I
- assure you that I have been as entertaining as I possibly could.
- LETTER the TENTH From Miss MARGARET LESLEY to Miss CHARLOTTE LUTTERELL
- Portman Square April 13th
- MY DEAR CHARLOTTE We left Lesley-Castle on the 28th of last Month,
- and arrived safely in London after a Journey of seven Days; I had the
- pleasure of finding your Letter here waiting my Arrival, for which you
- have my grateful Thanks. Ah! my dear Freind I every day more regret the
- serene and tranquil Pleasures of the Castle we have left, in exchange
- for the uncertain and unequal Amusements of this vaunted City. Not that
- I will pretend to assert that these uncertain and unequal Amusements
- are in the least Degree unpleasing to me; on the contrary I enjoy them
- extremely and should enjoy them even more, were I not certain that every
- appearance I make in Public but rivetts the Chains of those unhappy
- Beings whose Passion it is impossible not to pity, tho' it is out of my
- power to return. In short my Dear Charlotte it is my sensibility for
- the sufferings of so many amiable young Men, my Dislike of the extreme
- admiration I meet with, and my aversion to being so celebrated both in
- Public, in Private, in Papers, and in Printshops, that are the reasons
- why I cannot more fully enjoy, the Amusements so various and pleasing
- of London. How often have I wished that I possessed as little Personal
- Beauty as you do; that my figure were as inelegant; my face as unlovely;
- and my appearance as unpleasing as yours! But ah! what little chance
- is there of so desirable an Event; I have had the small-pox, and must
- therefore submit to my unhappy fate.
- I am now going to intrust you my dear Charlotte with a secret which has
- long disturbed the tranquility of my days, and which is of a kind to
- require the most inviolable Secrecy from you. Last Monday se'night
- Matilda and I accompanied Lady Lesley to a Rout at the Honourable Mrs
- Kickabout's; we were escorted by Mr Fitzgerald who is a very amiable
- young Man in the main, tho' perhaps a little singular in his Taste--He
- is in love with Matilda--. We had scarcely paid our Compliments to the
- Lady of the House and curtseyed to half a score different people when my
- Attention was attracted by the appearance of a Young Man the most lovely
- of his Sex, who at that moment entered the Room with another Gentleman
- and Lady. From the first moment I beheld him, I was certain that on him
- depended the future Happiness of my Life. Imagine my surprise when he
- was introduced to me by the name of Cleveland--I instantly recognised
- him as the Brother of Mrs Marlowe, and the acquaintance of my Charlotte
- at Bristol. Mr and Mrs M. were the gentleman and Lady who accompanied
- him. (You do not think Mrs Marlowe handsome?) The elegant address of Mr
- Cleveland, his polished Manners and Delightful Bow, at once confirmed my
- attachment. He did not speak; but I can imagine everything he would have
- said, had he opened his Mouth. I can picture to myself the cultivated
- Understanding, the Noble sentiments, and elegant Language which would
- have shone so conspicuous in the conversation of Mr Cleveland. The
- approach of Sir James Gower (one of my too numerous admirers) prevented
- the Discovery of any such Powers, by putting an end to a Conversation we
- had never commenced, and by attracting my attention to himself. But oh!
- how inferior are the accomplishments of Sir James to those of his so
- greatly envied Rival! Sir James is one of the most frequent of our
- Visitors, and is almost always of our Parties. We have since often met
- Mr and Mrs Marlowe but no Cleveland--he is always engaged some where
- else. Mrs Marlowe fatigues me to Death every time I see her by her
- tiresome Conversations about you and Eloisa. She is so stupid! I live in
- the hope of seeing her irrisistable Brother to night, as we are going to
- Lady Flambeaus, who is I know intimate with the Marlowes. Our party will
- be Lady Lesley, Matilda, Fitzgerald, Sir James Gower, and myself. We see
- little of Sir George, who is almost always at the gaming-table. Ah! my
- poor Fortune where art thou by this time? We see more of Lady L. who
- always makes her appearance (highly rouged) at Dinner-time. Alas! what
- Delightful Jewels will she be decked in this evening at Lady Flambeau's!
- Yet I wonder how she can herself delight in wearing them; surely she
- must be sensible of the ridiculous impropriety of loading her little
- diminutive figure with such superfluous ornaments; is it possible that
- she can not know how greatly superior an elegant simplicity is to the
- most studied apparel? Would she but Present them to Matilda and me, how
- greatly should we be obliged to her, How becoming would Diamonds be on
- our fine majestic figures! And how surprising it is that such an Idea
- should never have occurred to HER. I am sure if I have reflected in this
- manner once, I have fifty times. Whenever I see Lady Lesley dressed in
- them such reflections immediately come across me. My own Mother's Jewels
- too! But I will say no more on so melancholy a subject--let me entertain
- you with something more pleasing--Matilda had a letter this morning from
- Lesley, by which we have the pleasure of finding that he is at Naples
- has turned Roman-Catholic, obtained one of the Pope's Bulls for
- annulling his 1st Marriage and has since actually married a Neapolitan
- Lady of great Rank and Fortune. He tells us moreover that much the same
- sort of affair has befallen his first wife the worthless Louisa who is
- likewise at Naples had turned Roman-catholic, and is soon to be married
- to a Neapolitan Nobleman of great and Distinguished merit. He says,
- that they are at present very good Freinds, have quite forgiven all
- past errors and intend in future to be very good Neighbours. He invites
- Matilda and me to pay him a visit to Italy and to bring him his little
- Louisa whom both her Mother, Step-mother, and himself are equally
- desirous of beholding. As to our accepting his invitation, it is at
- Present very uncertain; Lady Lesley advises us to go without loss of
- time; Fitzgerald offers to escort us there, but Matilda has some doubts
- of the Propriety of such a scheme--she owns it would be very agreable.
- I am certain she likes the Fellow. My Father desires us not to be in a
- hurry, as perhaps if we wait a few months both he and Lady Lesley will
- do themselves the pleasure of attending us. Lady Lesley says no, that
- nothing will ever tempt her to forego the Amusements of Brighthelmstone
- for a Journey to Italy merely to see our Brother. “No (says the
- disagreable Woman) I have once in my life been fool enough to travel I
- dont know how many hundred Miles to see two of the Family, and I found
- it did not answer, so Deuce take me, if ever I am so foolish again.” So
- says her Ladyship, but Sir George still Perseveres in saying that
- perhaps in a month or two, they may accompany us. Adeiu my Dear
- Charlotte Yrs faithful Margaret Lesley.
- *****
- THE HISTORY OF ENGLAND
- FROM THE REIGN OF HENRY THE 4TH TO THE DEATH OF CHARLES THE 1ST
- BY A PARTIAL, PREJUDICED, AND IGNORANT HISTORIAN.
- *****
- To Miss Austen, eldest daughter of the Rev. George Austen, this work is
- inscribed with all due respect by THE AUTHOR.
- N.B. There will be very few Dates in this History.
- THE HISTORY OF ENGLAND
- HENRY the 4th
- Henry the 4th ascended the throne of England much to his own
- satisfaction in the year 1399, after having prevailed on his cousin and
- predecessor Richard the 2nd, to resign it to him, and to retire for the
- rest of his life to Pomfret Castle, where he happened to be murdered.
- It is to be supposed that Henry was married, since he had certainly four
- sons, but it is not in my power to inform the Reader who was his wife.
- Be this as it may, he did not live for ever, but falling ill, his son
- the Prince of Wales came and took away the crown; whereupon the King
- made a long speech, for which I must refer the Reader to Shakespear's
- Plays, and the Prince made a still longer. Things being thus settled
- between them the King died, and was succeeded by his son Henry who had
- previously beat Sir William Gascoigne.
- HENRY the 5th
- This Prince after he succeeded to the throne grew quite reformed and
- amiable, forsaking all his dissipated companions, and never thrashing
- Sir William again. During his reign, Lord Cobham was burnt alive, but I
- forget what for. His Majesty then turned his thoughts to France, where
- he went and fought the famous Battle of Agincourt. He afterwards married
- the King's daughter Catherine, a very agreable woman by Shakespear's
- account. In spite of all this however he died, and was succeeded by his
- son Henry.
- HENRY the 6th
- I cannot say much for this Monarch's sense. Nor would I if I could, for
- he was a Lancastrian. I suppose you know all about the Wars between him
- and the Duke of York who was of the right side; if you do not, you had
- better read some other History, for I shall not be very diffuse in this,
- meaning by it only to vent my spleen AGAINST, and shew my Hatred TO all
- those people whose parties or principles do not suit with mine, and not
- to give information. This King married Margaret of Anjou, a Woman whose
- distresses and misfortunes were so great as almost to make me who hate
- her, pity her. It was in this reign that Joan of Arc lived and made such
- a ROW among the English. They should not have burnt her--but they did.
- There were several Battles between the Yorkists and Lancastrians, in
- which the former (as they ought) usually conquered. At length they were
- entirely overcome; The King was murdered--The Queen was sent home--and
- Edward the 4th ascended the Throne.
- EDWARD the 4th
- This Monarch was famous only for his Beauty and his Courage, of which
- the Picture we have here given of him, and his undaunted Behaviour
- in marrying one Woman while he was engaged to another, are sufficient
- proofs. His Wife was Elizabeth Woodville, a Widow who, poor Woman! was
- afterwards confined in a Convent by that Monster of Iniquity and Avarice
- Henry the 7th. One of Edward's Mistresses was Jane Shore, who has had
- a play written about her, but it is a tragedy and therefore not worth
- reading. Having performed all these noble actions, his Majesty died, and
- was succeeded by his son.
- EDWARD the 5th
- This unfortunate Prince lived so little a while that nobody had him to
- draw his picture. He was murdered by his Uncle's Contrivance, whose name
- was Richard the 3rd.
- RICHARD the 3rd
- The Character of this Prince has been in general very severely treated
- by Historians, but as he was a YORK, I am rather inclined to suppose him
- a very respectable Man. It has indeed been confidently asserted that he
- killed his two Nephews and his Wife, but it has also been declared that
- he did not kill his two Nephews, which I am inclined to beleive true;
- and if this is the case, it may also be affirmed that he did not kill
- his Wife, for if Perkin Warbeck was really the Duke of York, why might
- not Lambert Simnel be the Widow of Richard. Whether innocent or guilty,
- he did not reign long in peace, for Henry Tudor E. of Richmond as great
- a villain as ever lived, made a great fuss about getting the Crown and
- having killed the King at the battle of Bosworth, he succeeded to it.
- HENRY the 7th
- This Monarch soon after his accession married the Princess Elizabeth of
- York, by which alliance he plainly proved that he thought his own right
- inferior to hers, tho' he pretended to the contrary. By this Marriage he
- had two sons and two daughters, the elder of which Daughters was married
- to the King of Scotland and had the happiness of being grandmother
- to one of the first Characters in the World. But of HER, I shall have
- occasion to speak more at large in future. The youngest, Mary, married
- first the King of France and secondly the D. of Suffolk, by whom she had
- one daughter, afterwards the Mother of Lady Jane Grey, who tho' inferior
- to her lovely Cousin the Queen of Scots, was yet an amiable young woman
- and famous for reading Greek while other people were hunting. It was in
- the reign of Henry the 7th that Perkin Warbeck and Lambert Simnel before
- mentioned made their appearance, the former of whom was set in the
- stocks, took shelter in Beaulieu Abbey, and was beheaded with the Earl
- of Warwick, and the latter was taken into the Kings kitchen. His Majesty
- died and was succeeded by his son Henry whose only merit was his not
- being quite so bad as his daughter Elizabeth.
- HENRY the 8th
- It would be an affront to my Readers were I to suppose that they were
- not as well acquainted with the particulars of this King's reign as I am
- myself. It will therefore be saving THEM the task of reading again what
- they have read before, and MYSELF the trouble of writing what I do not
- perfectly recollect, by giving only a slight sketch of the principal
- Events which marked his reign. Among these may be ranked Cardinal
- Wolsey's telling the father Abbott of Leicester Abbey that “he was come
- to lay his bones among them,” the reformation in Religion and the King's
- riding through the streets of London with Anna Bullen. It is however
- but Justice, and my Duty to declare that this amiable Woman was entirely
- innocent of the Crimes with which she was accused, and of which her
- Beauty, her Elegance, and her Sprightliness were sufficient proofs, not
- to mention her solemn Protestations of Innocence, the weakness of the
- Charges against her, and the King's Character; all of which add some
- confirmation, tho' perhaps but slight ones when in comparison with those
- before alledged in her favour. Tho' I do not profess giving many dates,
- yet as I think it proper to give some and shall of course make choice
- of those which it is most necessary for the Reader to know, I think it
- right to inform him that her letter to the King was dated on the 6th of
- May. The Crimes and Cruelties of this Prince, were too numerous to be
- mentioned, (as this history I trust has fully shown;) and nothing can
- be said in his vindication, but that his abolishing Religious Houses and
- leaving them to the ruinous depredations of time has been of infinite
- use to the landscape of England in general, which probably was a
- principal motive for his doing it, since otherwise why should a Man who
- was of no Religion himself be at so much trouble to abolish one which
- had for ages been established in the Kingdom. His Majesty's 5th Wife
- was the Duke of Norfolk's Neice who, tho' universally acquitted of the
- crimes for which she was beheaded, has been by many people supposed to
- have led an abandoned life before her Marriage--of this however I have
- many doubts, since she was a relation of that noble Duke of Norfolk who
- was so warm in the Queen of Scotland's cause, and who at last fell a
- victim to it. The Kings last wife contrived to survive him, but with
- difficulty effected it. He was succeeded by his only son Edward.
- EDWARD the 6th
- As this prince was only nine years old at the time of his Father's
- death, he was considered by many people as too young to govern, and the
- late King happening to be of the same opinion, his mother's Brother the
- Duke of Somerset was chosen Protector of the realm during his minority.
- This Man was on the whole of a very amiable Character, and is somewhat
- of a favourite with me, tho' I would by no means pretend to affirm that
- he was equal to those first of Men Robert Earl of Essex, Delamere, or
- Gilpin. He was beheaded, of which he might with reason have been proud,
- had he known that such was the death of Mary Queen of Scotland; but
- as it was impossible that he should be conscious of what had never
- happened, it does not appear that he felt particularly delighted with
- the manner of it. After his decease the Duke of Northumberland had the
- care of the King and the Kingdom, and performed his trust of both so
- well that the King died and the Kingdom was left to his daughter in law
- the Lady Jane Grey, who has been already mentioned as reading Greek.
- Whether she really understood that language or whether such a study
- proceeded only from an excess of vanity for which I beleive she was
- always rather remarkable, is uncertain. Whatever might be the cause,
- she preserved the same appearance of knowledge, and contempt of what
- was generally esteemed pleasure, during the whole of her life, for
- she declared herself displeased with being appointed Queen, and while
- conducting to the scaffold, she wrote a sentence in Latin and another in
- Greek on seeing the dead Body of her Husband accidentally passing that
- way.
- MARY
- This woman had the good luck of being advanced to the throne of England,
- in spite of the superior pretensions, Merit, and Beauty of her Cousins
- Mary Queen of Scotland and Jane Grey. Nor can I pity the Kingdom for the
- misfortunes they experienced during her Reign, since they fully deserved
- them, for having allowed her to succeed her Brother--which was a double
- peice of folly, since they might have foreseen that as she died without
- children, she would be succeeded by that disgrace to humanity, that
- pest of society, Elizabeth. Many were the people who fell martyrs to the
- protestant Religion during her reign; I suppose not fewer than a dozen.
- She married Philip King of Spain who in her sister's reign was famous
- for building Armadas. She died without issue, and then the dreadful
- moment came in which the destroyer of all comfort, the deceitful
- Betrayer of trust reposed in her, and the Murderess of her Cousin
- succeeded to the Throne.----
- ELIZABETH
- It was the peculiar misfortune of this Woman to have bad
- Ministers---Since wicked as she herself was, she could not have
- committed such extensive mischeif, had not these vile and abandoned Men
- connived at, and encouraged her in her Crimes. I know that it has by
- many people been asserted and beleived that Lord Burleigh, Sir Francis
- Walsingham, and the rest of those who filled the cheif offices of State
- were deserving, experienced, and able Ministers. But oh! how blinded
- such writers and such Readers must be to true Merit, to Merit despised,
- neglected and defamed, if they can persist in such opinions when they
- reflect that these men, these boasted men were such scandals to their
- Country and their sex as to allow and assist their Queen in confining
- for the space of nineteen years, a WOMAN who if the claims of
- Relationship and Merit were of no avail, yet as a Queen and as one who
- condescended to place confidence in her, had every reason to expect
- assistance and protection; and at length in allowing Elizabeth to bring
- this amiable Woman to an untimely, unmerited, and scandalous Death. Can
- any one if he reflects but for a moment on this blot, this everlasting
- blot upon their understanding and their Character, allow any praise to
- Lord Burleigh or Sir Francis Walsingham? Oh! what must this bewitching
- Princess whose only freind was then the Duke of Norfolk, and whose
- only ones now Mr Whitaker, Mrs Lefroy, Mrs Knight and myself, who was
- abandoned by her son, confined by her Cousin, abused, reproached and
- vilified by all, what must not her most noble mind have suffered when
- informed that Elizabeth had given orders for her Death! Yet she bore
- it with a most unshaken fortitude, firm in her mind; constant in her
- Religion; and prepared herself to meet the cruel fate to which she
- was doomed, with a magnanimity that would alone proceed from conscious
- Innocence. And yet could you Reader have beleived it possible that
- some hardened and zealous Protestants have even abused her for that
- steadfastness in the Catholic Religion which reflected on her so
- much credit? But this is a striking proof of THEIR narrow souls and
- prejudiced Judgements who accuse her. She was executed in the Great Hall
- at Fortheringay Castle (sacred Place!) on Wednesday the 8th of February
- 1586--to the everlasting Reproach of Elizabeth, her Ministers, and of
- England in general. It may not be unnecessary before I entirely conclude
- my account of this ill-fated Queen, to observe that she had been accused
- of several crimes during the time of her reigning in Scotland, of which
- I now most seriously do assure my Reader that she was entirely innocent;
- having never been guilty of anything more than Imprudencies into which
- she was betrayed by the openness of her Heart, her Youth, and her
- Education. Having I trust by this assurance entirely done away every
- Suspicion and every doubt which might have arisen in the Reader's mind,
- from what other Historians have written of her, I shall proceed to
- mention the remaining Events that marked Elizabeth's reign. It was about
- this time that Sir Francis Drake the first English Navigator who sailed
- round the World, lived, to be the ornament of his Country and his
- profession. Yet great as he was, and justly celebrated as a sailor,
- I cannot help foreseeing that he will be equalled in this or the next
- Century by one who tho' now but young, already promises to answer all
- the ardent and sanguine expectations of his Relations and Freinds,
- amongst whom I may class the amiable Lady to whom this work is
- dedicated, and my no less amiable self.
- Though of a different profession, and shining in a different sphere of
- Life, yet equally conspicuous in the Character of an Earl, as Drake was
- in that of a Sailor, was Robert Devereux Lord Essex. This unfortunate
- young Man was not unlike in character to that equally unfortunate
- one FREDERIC DELAMERE. The simile may be carried still farther, and
- Elizabeth the torment of Essex may be compared to the Emmeline of
- Delamere. It would be endless to recount the misfortunes of this noble
- and gallant Earl. It is sufficient to say that he was beheaded on the
- 25th of Feb, after having been Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, after having
- clapped his hand on his sword, and after performing many other services
- to his Country. Elizabeth did not long survive his loss, and died so
- miserable that were it not an injury to the memory of Mary I should pity
- her.
- JAMES the 1st
- Though this King had some faults, among which and as the most principal,
- was his allowing his Mother's death, yet considered on the whole I
- cannot help liking him. He married Anne of Denmark, and had several
- Children; fortunately for him his eldest son Prince Henry died before
- his father or he might have experienced the evils which befell his
- unfortunate Brother.
- As I am myself partial to the roman catholic religion, it is with
- infinite regret that I am obliged to blame the Behaviour of any Member
- of it: yet Truth being I think very excusable in an Historian, I am
- necessitated to say that in this reign the roman Catholics of England
- did not behave like Gentlemen to the protestants. Their Behaviour
- indeed to the Royal Family and both Houses of Parliament might justly
- be considered by them as very uncivil, and even Sir Henry Percy tho'
- certainly the best bred man of the party, had none of that general
- politeness which is so universally pleasing, as his attentions were
- entirely confined to Lord Mounteagle.
- Sir Walter Raleigh flourished in this and the preceeding reign, and is
- by many people held in great veneration and respect--But as he was an
- enemy of the noble Essex, I have nothing to say in praise of him, and
- must refer all those who may wish to be acquainted with the particulars
- of his life, to Mr Sheridan's play of the Critic, where they will
- find many interesting anecdotes as well of him as of his friend Sir
- Christopher Hatton.--His Majesty was of that amiable disposition which
- inclines to Freindship, and in such points was possessed of a keener
- penetration in discovering Merit than many other people. I once heard an
- excellent Sharade on a Carpet, of which the subject I am now on reminds
- me, and as I think it may afford my Readers some amusement to FIND IT
- OUT, I shall here take the liberty of presenting it to them.
- SHARADE My first is what my second was to King James the 1st, and you
- tread on my whole.
- The principal favourites of his Majesty were Car, who was afterwards
- created Earl of Somerset and whose name perhaps may have some share
- in the above mentioned Sharade, and George Villiers afterwards Duke of
- Buckingham. On his Majesty's death he was succeeded by his son Charles.
- CHARLES the 1st
- This amiable Monarch seems born to have suffered misfortunes equal to
- those of his lovely Grandmother; misfortunes which he could not deserve
- since he was her descendant. Never certainly were there before so many
- detestable Characters at one time in England as in this Period of its
- History; never were amiable men so scarce. The number of them throughout
- the whole Kingdom amounting only to FIVE, besides the inhabitants
- of Oxford who were always loyal to their King and faithful to his
- interests. The names of this noble five who never forgot the duty of
- the subject, or swerved from their attachment to his Majesty, were as
- follows--The King himself, ever stedfast in his own support--Archbishop
- Laud, Earl of Strafford, Viscount Faulkland and Duke of Ormond, who were
- scarcely less strenuous or zealous in the cause. While the VILLIANS
- of the time would make too long a list to be written or read; I shall
- therefore content myself with mentioning the leaders of the Gang.
- Cromwell, Fairfax, Hampden, and Pym may be considered as the original
- Causers of all the disturbances, Distresses, and Civil Wars in which
- England for many years was embroiled. In this reign as well as in that
- of Elizabeth, I am obliged in spite of my attachment to the Scotch,
- to consider them as equally guilty with the generality of the English,
- since they dared to think differently from their Sovereign, to forget
- the Adoration which as STUARTS it was their Duty to pay them, to rebel
- against, dethrone and imprison the unfortunate Mary; to oppose, to
- deceive, and to sell the no less unfortunate Charles. The Events of this
- Monarch's reign are too numerous for my pen, and indeed the recital
- of any Events (except what I make myself) is uninteresting to me; my
- principal reason for undertaking the History of England being to Prove
- the innocence of the Queen of Scotland, which I flatter myself with
- having effectually done, and to abuse Elizabeth, tho' I am rather
- fearful of having fallen short in the latter part of my scheme.--As
- therefore it is not my intention to give any particular account of the
- distresses into which this King was involved through the misconduct and
- Cruelty of his Parliament, I shall satisfy myself with vindicating him
- from the Reproach of Arbitrary and tyrannical Government with which he
- has often been charged. This, I feel, is not difficult to be done, for
- with one argument I am certain of satisfying every sensible and well
- disposed person whose opinions have been properly guided by a good
- Education--and this Argument is that he was a STUART.
- Finis Saturday Nov: 26th 1791.
- *****
- A COLLECTION OF LETTERS
- To Miss COOPER
- COUSIN Conscious of the Charming Character which in every Country, and
- every Clime in Christendom is Cried, Concerning you, with Caution and
- Care I Commend to your Charitable Criticism this Clever Collection
- of Curious Comments, which have been Carefully Culled, Collected and
- Classed by your Comical Cousin
- The Author.
- *****
- A COLLECTION OF LETTERS
- LETTER the FIRST From a MOTHER to her FREIND.
- My Children begin now to claim all my attention in different Manner from
- that in which they have been used to receive it, as they are now arrived
- at that age when it is necessary for them in some measure to become
- conversant with the World, My Augusta is 17 and her sister scarcely a
- twelvemonth younger. I flatter myself that their education has been such
- as will not disgrace their appearance in the World, and that THEY will
- not disgrace their Education I have every reason to beleive. Indeed they
- are sweet Girls--. Sensible yet unaffected--Accomplished yet Easy--.
- Lively yet Gentle--. As their progress in every thing they have learnt
- has been always the same, I am willing to forget the difference of age,
- and to introduce them together into Public. This very Evening is fixed
- on as their first ENTREE into Life, as we are to drink tea with Mrs Cope
- and her Daughter. I am glad that we are to meet no one, for my Girls
- sake, as it would be awkward for them to enter too wide a Circle on the
- very first day. But we shall proceed by degrees.--Tomorrow Mr Stanly's
- family will drink tea with us, and perhaps the Miss Phillips's will meet
- them. On Tuesday we shall pay Morning Visits--On Wednesday we are to
- dine at Westbrook. On Thursday we have Company at home. On Friday we
- are to be at a Private Concert at Sir John Wynna's--and on Saturday
- we expect Miss Dawson to call in the Morning--which will complete my
- Daughters Introduction into Life. How they will bear so much dissipation
- I cannot imagine; of their spirits I have no fear, I only dread their
- health.
- This mighty affair is now happily over, and my Girls are OUT. As the
- moment approached for our departure, you can have no idea how the sweet
- Creatures trembled with fear and expectation. Before the Carriage drove
- to the door, I called them into my dressing-room, and as soon as they
- were seated thus addressed them. “My dear Girls the moment is now
- arrived when I am to reap the rewards of all my Anxieties and Labours
- towards you during your Education. You are this Evening to enter a World
- in which you will meet with many wonderfull Things; Yet let me warn
- you against suffering yourselves to be meanly swayed by the Follies and
- Vices of others, for beleive me my beloved Children that if you do--I
- shall be very sorry for it.” They both assured me that they would ever
- remember my advice with Gratitude, and follow it with attention; That
- they were prepared to find a World full of things to amaze and to shock
- them: but that they trusted their behaviour would never give me reason
- to repent the Watchful Care with which I had presided over their infancy
- and formed their Minds--” “With such expectations and such intentions
- (cried I) I can have nothing to fear from you--and can chearfully
- conduct you to Mrs Cope's without a fear of your being seduced by her
- Example, or contaminated by her Follies. Come, then my Children (added
- I) the Carriage is driving to the door, and I will not a moment delay
- the happiness you are so impatient to enjoy.” When we arrived at
- Warleigh, poor Augusta could scarcely breathe, while Margaret was all
- Life and Rapture. “The long-expected Moment is now arrived (said she)
- and we shall soon be in the World.”--In a few Moments we were in Mrs
- Cope's parlour, where with her daughter she sate ready to receive us.
- I observed with delight the impression my Children made on them--. They
- were indeed two sweet, elegant-looking Girls, and tho' somewhat abashed
- from the peculiarity of their situation, yet there was an ease in their
- Manners and address which could not fail of pleasing--. Imagine my
- dear Madam how delighted I must have been in beholding as I did, how
- attentively they observed every object they saw, how disgusted with some
- Things, how enchanted with others, how astonished at all! On the whole
- however they returned in raptures with the World, its Inhabitants, and
- Manners. Yrs Ever--A. F.
- LETTER the SECOND From a YOUNG LADY crossed in Love to her freind
- Why should this last disappointment hang so heavily on my spirits? Why
- should I feel it more, why should it wound me deeper than those I
- have experienced before? Can it be that I have a greater affection for
- Willoughby than I had for his amiable predecessors? Or is it that our
- feelings become more acute from being often wounded? I must suppose my
- dear Belle that this is the Case, since I am not conscious of being more
- sincerely attached to Willoughby than I was to Neville, Fitzowen, or
- either of the Crawfords, for all of whom I once felt the most lasting
- affection that ever warmed a Woman's heart. Tell me then dear Belle why
- I still sigh when I think of the faithless Edward, or why I weep when I
- behold his Bride, for too surely this is the case--. My Freinds are all
- alarmed for me; They fear my declining health; they lament my want
- of spirits; they dread the effects of both. In hopes of releiving my
- melancholy, by directing my thoughts to other objects, they have invited
- several of their freinds to spend the Christmas with us. Lady Bridget
- Darkwood and her sister-in-law, Miss Jane are expected on Friday; and
- Colonel Seaton's family will be with us next week. This is all most
- kindly meant by my Uncle and Cousins; but what can the presence of a
- dozen indefferent people do to me, but weary and distress me--. I will
- not finish my Letter till some of our Visitors are arrived.
- Friday Evening Lady Bridget came this morning, and with her, her sweet
- sister Miss Jane--. Although I have been acquainted with this charming
- Woman above fifteen Years, yet I never before observed how lovely she
- is. She is now about 35, and in spite of sickness, sorrow and Time is
- more blooming than I ever saw a Girl of 17. I was delighted with her,
- the moment she entered the house, and she appeared equally pleased with
- me, attaching herself to me during the remainder of the day. There is
- something so sweet, so mild in her Countenance, that she seems more than
- Mortal. Her Conversation is as bewitching as her appearance; I could not
- help telling her how much she engaged my admiration--. “Oh! Miss Jane
- (said I)--and stopped from an inability at the moment of expressing
- myself as I could wish--Oh! Miss Jane--(I repeated)--I could not think
- of words to suit my feelings--She seemed waiting for my speech--. I
- was confused--distressed--my thoughts were bewildered--and I could only
- add--“How do you do?” She saw and felt for my Embarrassment and with
- admirable presence of mind releived me from it by saying--“My dear
- Sophia be not uneasy at having exposed yourself--I will turn the
- Conversation without appearing to notice it. “Oh! how I loved her for
- her kindness!” Do you ride as much as you used to do?” said she--. “I
- am advised to ride by my Physician. We have delightful Rides round us,
- I have a Charming horse, am uncommonly fond of the Amusement, replied
- I quite recovered from my Confusion, and in short I ride a great deal.”
- “You are in the right my Love,” said she. Then repeating the following
- line which was an extempore and equally adapted to recommend both Riding
- and Candour--
- “Ride where you may, Be Candid where you can,” she added,” I rode once,
- but it is many years ago--She spoke this in so low and tremulous a
- Voice, that I was silent--. Struck with her Manner of speaking I could
- make no reply. “I have not ridden, continued she fixing her Eyes on my
- face, since I was married.” I was never so surprised--“Married, Ma'am!”
- I repeated. “You may well wear that look of astonishment, said she,
- since what I have said must appear improbable to you--Yet nothing is
- more true than that I once was married.”
- “Then why are you called Miss Jane?”
- “I married, my Sophia without the consent or knowledge of my father the
- late Admiral Annesley. It was therefore necessary to keep the secret
- from him and from every one, till some fortunate opportunity might offer
- of revealing it--. Such an opportunity alas! was but too soon given in
- the death of my dear Capt. Dashwood--Pardon these tears, continued Miss
- Jane wiping her Eyes, I owe them to my Husband's memory. He fell my
- Sophia, while fighting for his Country in America after a most happy
- Union of seven years--. My Children, two sweet Boys and a Girl, who
- had constantly resided with my Father and me, passing with him and with
- every one as the Children of a Brother (tho' I had ever been an only
- Child) had as yet been the comforts of my Life. But no sooner had
- I lossed my Henry, than these sweet Creatures fell sick and died--.
- Conceive dear Sophia what my feelings must have been when as an Aunt I
- attended my Children to their early Grave--. My Father did not survive
- them many weeks--He died, poor Good old man, happily ignorant to his
- last hour of my Marriage.'
- “But did not you own it, and assume his name at your husband's death?”
- “No; I could not bring myself to do it; more especially when in my
- Children I lost all inducement for doing it. Lady Bridget, and yourself
- are the only persons who are in the knowledge of my having ever been
- either Wife or Mother. As I could not Prevail on myself to take the
- name of Dashwood (a name which after my Henry's death I could never hear
- without emotion) and as I was conscious of having no right to that of
- Annesley, I dropt all thoughts of either, and have made it a point of
- bearing only my Christian one since my Father's death.” She paused--“Oh!
- my dear Miss Jane (said I) how infinitely am I obliged to you for so
- entertaining a story! You cannot think how it has diverted me! But have
- you quite done?”
- “I have only to add my dear Sophia, that my Henry's elder Brother dieing
- about the same time, Lady Bridget became a Widow like myself, and as we
- had always loved each other in idea from the high Character in which we
- had ever been spoken of, though we had never met, we determined to live
- together. We wrote to one another on the same subject by the same post,
- so exactly did our feeling and our actions coincide! We both eagerly
- embraced the proposals we gave and received of becoming one family, and
- have from that time lived together in the greatest affection.”
- “And is this all? said I, I hope you have not done.”
- “Indeed I have; and did you ever hear a story more pathetic?”
- “I never did--and it is for that reason it pleases me so much, for when
- one is unhappy nothing is so delightful to one's sensations as to hear
- of equal misery.”
- “Ah! but my Sophia why are YOU unhappy?”
- “Have you not heard Madam of Willoughby's Marriage?”
- “But my love why lament HIS perfidy, when you bore so well that of many
- young Men before?”
- “Ah! Madam, I was used to it then, but when Willoughby broke his
- Engagements I had not been dissapointed for half a year.”
- “Poor Girl!” said Miss Jane.
- LETTER the THIRD From a YOUNG LADY in distressed Circumstances to her
- freind
- A few days ago I was at a private Ball given by Mr Ashburnham. As my
- Mother never goes out she entrusted me to the care of Lady Greville who
- did me the honour of calling for me in her way and of allowing me to sit
- forwards, which is a favour about which I am very indifferent especially
- as I know it is considered as confering a great obligation on me “So
- Miss Maria (said her Ladyship as she saw me advancing to the door of the
- Carriage) you seem very smart to night--MY poor Girls will appear quite
- to disadvantage by YOU--I only hope your Mother may not have distressed
- herself to set YOU off. Have you got a new Gown on?”
- “Yes Ma'am.” replied I with as much indifference as I could assume.
- “Aye, and a fine one too I think--(feeling it, as by her permission I
- seated myself by her) I dare say it is all very smart--But I must
- own, for you know I always speak my mind, that I think it was quite a
- needless piece of expence--Why could not you have worn your old striped
- one? It is not my way to find fault with People because they are poor,
- for I always think that they are more to be despised and pitied than
- blamed for it, especially if they cannot help it, but at the same time I
- must say that in my opinion your old striped Gown would have been quite
- fine enough for its Wearer--for to tell you the truth (I always speak my
- mind) I am very much afraid that one half of the people in the room will
- not know whether you have a Gown on or not--But I suppose you intend to
- make your fortune to night--. Well, the sooner the better; and I wish
- you success.”
- “Indeed Ma'am I have no such intention--”
- “Who ever heard a young Lady own that she was a Fortune-hunter?” Miss
- Greville laughed but I am sure Ellen felt for me.
- “Was your Mother gone to bed before you left her?” said her Ladyship.
- “Dear Ma'am, said Ellen it is but nine o'clock.”
- “True Ellen, but Candles cost money, and Mrs Williams is too wise to be
- extravagant.”
- “She was just sitting down to supper Ma'am.”
- “And what had she got for supper?” “I did not observe.” “Bread and
- Cheese I suppose.” “I should never wish for a better supper.” said
- Ellen. “You have never any reason replied her Mother, as a better is
- always provided for you.” Miss Greville laughed excessively, as she
- constantly does at her Mother's wit.
- Such is the humiliating Situation in which I am forced to appear while
- riding in her Ladyship's Coach--I dare not be impertinent, as my Mother
- is always admonishing me to be humble and patient if I wish to make my
- way in the world. She insists on my accepting every invitation of Lady
- Greville, or you may be certain that I would never enter either her
- House, or her Coach with the disagreable certainty I always have of
- being abused for my Poverty while I am in them.--When we arrived at
- Ashburnham, it was nearly ten o'clock, which was an hour and a half
- later than we were desired to be there; but Lady Greville is too
- fashionable (or fancies herself to be so) to be punctual. The Dancing
- however was not begun as they waited for Miss Greville. I had not been
- long in the room before I was engaged to dance by Mr Bernard, but just
- as we were going to stand up, he recollected that his Servant had got
- his white Gloves, and immediately ran out to fetch them. In the mean
- time the Dancing began and Lady Greville in passing to another room went
- exactly before me--She saw me and instantly stopping, said to me though
- there were several people close to us,
- “Hey day, Miss Maria! What cannot you get a partner? Poor Young Lady!
- I am afraid your new Gown was put on for nothing. But do not despair;
- perhaps you may get a hop before the Evening is over.” So saying, she
- passed on without hearing my repeated assurance of being engaged, and
- leaving me very much provoked at being so exposed before every one--Mr
- Bernard however soon returned and by coming to me the moment he entered
- the room, and leading me to the Dancers my Character I hope was cleared
- from the imputation Lady Greville had thrown on it, in the eyes of all
- the old Ladies who had heard her speech. I soon forgot all my vexations
- in the pleasure of dancing and of having the most agreable partner in
- the room. As he is moreover heir to a very large Estate I could see that
- Lady Greville did not look very well pleased when she found who had been
- his Choice--She was determined to mortify me, and accordingly when we
- were sitting down between the dances, she came to me with more than her
- usual insulting importance attended by Miss Mason and said loud enough
- to be heard by half the people in the room, “Pray Miss Maria in what
- way of business was your Grandfather? for Miss Mason and I cannot agree
- whether he was a Grocer or a Bookbinder.” I saw that she wanted to
- mortify me, and was resolved if I possibly could to Prevent her seeing
- that her scheme succeeded. “Neither Madam; he was a Wine Merchant.”
- “Aye, I knew he was in some such low way--He broke did not he?” “I
- beleive not Ma'am.” “Did not he abscond?” “I never heard that he did.”
- “At least he died insolvent?” “I was never told so before.” “Why, was
- not your FATHER as poor as a Rat” “I fancy not.” “Was not he in the
- Kings Bench once?” “I never saw him there.” She gave me SUCH a look, and
- turned away in a great passion; while I was half delighted with myself
- for my impertinence, and half afraid of being thought too saucy. As Lady
- Greville was extremely angry with me, she took no further notice of
- me all the Evening, and indeed had I been in favour I should have been
- equally neglected, as she was got into a Party of great folks and she
- never speaks to me when she can to anyone else. Miss Greville was with
- her Mother's party at supper, but Ellen preferred staying with the
- Bernards and me. We had a very pleasant Dance and as Lady G--slept all
- the way home, I had a very comfortable ride.
- The next day while we were at dinner Lady Greville's Coach stopped at
- the door, for that is the time of day she generally contrives it should.
- She sent in a message by the servant to say that “she should not get out
- but that Miss Maria must come to the Coach-door, as she wanted to speak
- to her, and that she must make haste and come immediately--” “What an
- impertinent Message Mama!” said I--“Go Maria--” replied she--Accordingly
- I went and was obliged to stand there at her Ladyships pleasure though
- the Wind was extremely high and very cold.
- “Why I think Miss Maria you are not quite so smart as you were last
- night--But I did not come to examine your dress, but to tell you that
- you may dine with us the day after tomorrow--Not tomorrow, remember, do
- not come tomorrow, for we expect Lord and Lady Clermont and Sir Thomas
- Stanley's family--There will be no occasion for your being very fine
- for I shant send the Carriage--If it rains you may take an umbrella--”
- I could hardly help laughing at hearing her give me leave to keep myself
- dry--“And pray remember to be in time, for I shant wait--I hate my
- Victuals over-done--But you need not come before the time--How does
- your Mother do? She is at dinner is not she?” “Yes Ma'am we were in the
- middle of dinner when your Ladyship came.” “I am afraid you find it very
- cold Maria.” said Ellen. “Yes, it is an horrible East wind--said her
- Mother--I assure you I can hardly bear the window down--But you are used
- to be blown about by the wind Miss Maria and that is what has made your
- Complexion so rudely and coarse. You young Ladies who cannot often ride
- in a Carriage never mind what weather you trudge in, or how the wind
- shews your legs. I would not have my Girls stand out of doors as you do
- in such a day as this. But some sort of people have no feelings either
- of cold or Delicacy--Well, remember that we shall expect you on Thursday
- at 5 o'clock--You must tell your Maid to come for you at night--There
- will be no Moon--and you will have an horrid walk home--My compts to
- Your Mother--I am afraid your dinner will be cold--Drive on--” And away
- she went, leaving me in a great passion with her as she always does.
- Maria Williams.
- LETTER the FOURTH From a YOUNG LADY rather impertinent to her freind
- We dined yesterday with Mr Evelyn where we were introduced to a very
- agreable looking Girl his Cousin. I was extremely pleased with her
- appearance, for added to the charms of an engaging face, her manner and
- voice had something peculiarly interesting in them. So much so, that
- they inspired me with a great curiosity to know the history of her Life,
- who were her Parents, where she came from, and what had befallen her,
- for it was then only known that she was a relation of Mr Evelyn, and
- that her name was Grenville. In the evening a favourable opportunity
- offered to me of attempting at least to know what I wished to know, for
- every one played at Cards but Mrs Evelyn, My Mother, Dr Drayton, Miss
- Grenville and myself, and as the two former were engaged in a whispering
- Conversation, and the Doctor fell asleep, we were of necessity obliged
- to entertain each other. This was what I wished and being determined not
- to remain in ignorance for want of asking, I began the Conversation in
- the following Manner.
- “Have you been long in Essex Ma'am?”
- “I arrived on Tuesday.”
- “You came from Derbyshire?”
- “No, Ma'am! appearing surprised at my question, from Suffolk.” You will
- think this a good dash of mine my dear Mary, but you know that I am not
- wanting for Impudence when I have any end in veiw. “Are you pleased with
- the Country Miss Grenville? Do you find it equal to the one you have
- left?”
- “Much superior Ma'am in point of Beauty.” She sighed. I longed to know
- for why.
- “But the face of any Country however beautiful said I, can be but a poor
- consolation for the loss of one's dearest Freinds.” She shook her
- head, as if she felt the truth of what I said. My Curiosity was so much
- raised, that I was resolved at any rate to satisfy it.
- “You regret having left Suffolk then Miss Grenville?” “Indeed I do.”
- “You were born there I suppose?” “Yes Ma'am I was and passed many happy
- years there--”
- “That is a great comfort--said I--I hope Ma'am that you never spent any
- unhappy one's there.”
- “Perfect Felicity is not the property of Mortals, and no one has a right
- to expect uninterrupted Happiness.--Some Misfortunes I have certainly
- met with.”
- “WHAT Misfortunes dear Ma'am? replied I, burning with impatience to know
- every thing. “NONE Ma'am I hope that have been the effect of any wilfull
- fault in me.” “I dare say not Ma'am, and have no doubt but that any
- sufferings you may have experienced could arise only from the cruelties
- of Relations or the Errors of Freinds.” She sighed--“You seem unhappy
- my dear Miss Grenville--Is it in my power to soften your Misfortunes?”
- “YOUR power Ma'am replied she extremely surprised; it is in NO ONES
- power to make me happy.” She pronounced these words in so mournfull and
- solemn an accent, that for some time I had not courage to reply. I
- was actually silenced. I recovered myself however in a few moments and
- looking at her with all the affection I could, “My dear Miss Grenville
- said I, you appear extremely young--and may probably stand in need of
- some one's advice whose regard for you, joined to superior Age, perhaps
- superior Judgement might authorise her to give it. I am that person, and
- I now challenge you to accept the offer I make you of my Confidence and
- Freindship, in return to which I shall only ask for yours--”
- “You are extremely obliging Ma'am--said she--and I am highly flattered
- by your attention to me--But I am in no difficulty, no doubt, no
- uncertainty of situation in which any advice can be wanted. Whenever I
- am however continued she brightening into a complaisant smile, I shall
- know where to apply.”
- I bowed, but felt a good deal mortified by such a repulse; still however
- I had not given up my point. I found that by the appearance of sentiment
- and Freindship nothing was to be gained and determined therefore to
- renew my attacks by Questions and suppositions. “Do you intend staying
- long in this part of England Miss Grenville?”
- “Yes Ma'am, some time I beleive.”
- “But how will Mr and Mrs Grenville bear your absence?”
- “They are neither of them alive Ma'am.” This was an answer I did not
- expect--I was quite silenced, and never felt so awkward in my Life---.
- LETTER the FIFTH From a YOUNG LADY very much in love to her Freind
- My Uncle gets more stingy, my Aunt more particular, and I more in love
- every day. What shall we all be at this rate by the end of the year! I
- had this morning the happiness of receiving the following Letter from my
- dear Musgrove.
- Sackville St: Janry 7th It is a month to day since I first beheld my
- lovely Henrietta, and the sacred anniversary must and shall be kept in
- a manner becoming the day--by writing to her. Never shall I forget the
- moment when her Beauties first broke on my sight--No time as you well
- know can erase it from my Memory. It was at Lady Scudamores. Happy Lady
- Scudamore to live within a mile of the divine Henrietta! When the lovely
- Creature first entered the room, oh! what were my sensations? The sight
- of you was like the sight ofa wonderful fine Thing. I started--I gazed
- at her with admiration--She appeared every moment more Charming, and the
- unfortunate Musgrove became a captive to your Charms before I had time
- to look about me. Yes Madam, I had the happiness of adoring you, an
- happiness for which I cannot be too grateful. “What said he to himself
- is Musgrove allowed to die for Henrietta? Enviable Mortal! and may he
- pine for her who is the object of universal admiration, who is adored
- by a Colonel, and toasted by a Baronet! Adorable Henrietta how beautiful
- you are! I declare you are quite divine! You are more than Mortal.
- You are an Angel. You are Venus herself. In short Madam you are the
- prettiest Girl I ever saw in my Life--and her Beauty is encreased in her
- Musgroves Eyes, by permitting him to love her and allowing me to hope.
- And ah! Angelic Miss Henrietta Heaven is my witness how ardently I do
- hope for the death of your villanous Uncle and his abandoned Wife, since
- my fair one will not consent to be mine till their decease has placed
- her in affluence above what my fortune can procure--. Though it is an
- improvable Estate--. Cruel Henrietta to persist in such a resolution! I
- am at Present with my sister where I mean to continue till my own house
- which tho' an excellent one is at Present somewhat out of repair, is
- ready to receive me. Amiable princess of my Heart farewell--Of that
- Heart which trembles while it signs itself Your most ardent Admirer and
- devoted humble servt. T. Musgrove.
- There is a pattern for a Love-letter Matilda! Did you ever read such
- a master-piece of Writing? Such sense, such sentiment, such purity of
- Thought, such flow of Language and such unfeigned Love in one sheet?
- No, never I can answer for it, since a Musgrove is not to be met with
- by every Girl. Oh! how I long to be with him! I intend to send him the
- following in answer to his Letter tomorrow.
- My dearest Musgrove--. Words cannot express how happy your Letter made
- me; I thought I should have cried for joy, for I love you better than
- any body in the World. I think you the most amiable, and the handsomest
- Man in England, and so to be sure you are. I never read so sweet a
- Letter in my Life. Do write me another just like it, and tell me you are
- in love with me in every other line. I quite die to see you. How shall
- we manage to see one another? for we are so much in love that we cannot
- live asunder. Oh! my dear Musgrove you cannot think how impatiently I
- wait for the death of my Uncle and Aunt--If they will not Die soon, I
- beleive I shall run mad, for I get more in love with you every day of my
- Life.
- How happy your Sister is to enjoy the pleasure of your Company in her
- house, and how happy every body in London must be because you are there.
- I hope you will be so kind as to write to me again soon, for I never
- read such sweet Letters as yours. I am my dearest Musgrove most truly
- and faithfully yours for ever and ever Henrietta Halton.
- I hope he will like my answer; it is as good a one as I can write
- though nothing to his; Indeed I had always heard what a dab he was at
- a Love-letter. I saw him you know for the first time at Lady
- Scudamores--And when I saw her Ladyship afterwards she asked me how I
- liked her Cousin Musgrove?
- “Why upon my word said I, I think he is a very handsome young Man.”
- “I am glad you think so replied she, for he is distractedly in love with
- you.”
- “Law! Lady Scudamore said I, how can you talk so ridiculously?”
- “Nay, t'is very true answered she, I assure you, for he was in love with
- you from the first moment he beheld you.”
- “I wish it may be true said I, for that is the only kind of love I
- would give a farthing for--There is some sense in being in love at first
- sight.”
- “Well, I give you Joy of your conquest, replied Lady Scudamore, and
- I beleive it to have been a very complete one; I am sure it is not a
- contemptible one, for my Cousin is a charming young fellow, has seen a
- great deal of the World, and writes the best Love-letters I ever read.”
- This made me very happy, and I was excessively pleased with my conquest.
- However, I thought it was proper to give myself a few Airs--so I said to
- her--
- “This is all very pretty Lady Scudamore, but you know that we young
- Ladies who are Heiresses must not throw ourselves away upon Men who have
- no fortune at all.”
- “My dear Miss Halton said she, I am as much convinced of that as you can
- be, and I do assure you that I should be the last person to encourage
- your marrying anyone who had not some pretensions to expect a fortune
- with you. Mr Musgrove is so far from being poor that he has an estate of
- several hundreds an year which is capable of great Improvement, and an
- excellent House, though at Present it is not quite in repair.”
- “If that is the case replied I, I have nothing more to say against
- him, and if as you say he is an informed young Man and can write a
- good Love-letter, I am sure I have no reason to find fault with him
- for admiring me, tho' perhaps I may not marry him for all that Lady
- Scudamore.”
- “You are certainly under no obligation to marry him answered her
- Ladyship, except that which love himself will dictate to you, for if I
- am not greatly mistaken you are at this very moment unknown to yourself,
- cherishing a most tender affection for him.”
- “Law, Lady Scudamore replied I blushing how can you think of such a
- thing?”
- “Because every look, every word betrays it, answered she; Come my dear
- Henrietta, consider me as a freind, and be sincere with me--Do not you
- prefer Mr Musgrove to any man of your acquaintance?”
- “Pray do not ask me such questions Lady Scudamore, said I turning away
- my head, for it is not fit for me to answer them.”
- “Nay my Love replied she, now you confirm my suspicions. But why
- Henrietta should you be ashamed to own a well-placed Love, or why refuse
- to confide in me?”
- “I am not ashamed to own it; said I taking Courage. I do not refuse to
- confide in you or blush to say that I do love your cousin Mr Musgrove,
- that I am sincerely attached to him, for it is no disgrace to love a
- handsome Man. If he were plain indeed I might have had reason to be
- ashamed of a passion which must have been mean since the object would
- have been unworthy. But with such a figure and face, and such beautiful
- hair as your Cousin has, why should I blush to own that such superior
- merit has made an impression on me.”
- “My sweet Girl (said Lady Scudamore embracing me with great affection)
- what a delicate way of thinking you have in these matters, and what a
- quick discernment for one of your years! Oh! how I honour you for such
- Noble Sentiments!”
- “Do you Ma'am said I; You are vastly obliging. But pray Lady Scudamore
- did your Cousin himself tell you of his affection for me I shall like
- him the better if he did, for what is a Lover without a Confidante?”
- “Oh! my Love replied she, you were born for each other. Every word
- you say more deeply convinces me that your Minds are actuated by the
- invisible power of simpathy, for your opinions and sentiments so exactly
- coincide. Nay, the colour of your Hair is not very different. Yes my
- dear Girl, the poor despairing Musgrove did reveal to me the story of
- his Love--. Nor was I surprised at it--I know not how it was, but I had
- a kind of presentiment that he would be in love with you.”
- “Well, but how did he break it to you?”
- “It was not till after supper. We were sitting round the fire
- together talking on indifferent subjects, though to say the truth the
- Conversation was cheifly on my side for he was thoughtful and silent,
- when on a sudden he interrupted me in the midst of something I was
- saying, by exclaiming in a most Theatrical tone--
- Yes I'm in love I feel it now And Henrietta Halton has undone me
- “Oh! What a sweet way replied I, of declaring his Passion! To make such
- a couple of charming lines about me! What a pity it is that they are not
- in rhime!”
- “I am very glad you like it answered she; To be sure there was a great
- deal of Taste in it. And are you in love with her, Cousin? said I. I am
- very sorry for it, for unexceptionable as you are in every respect, with
- a pretty Estate capable of Great improvements, and an excellent House
- tho' somewhat out of repair, yet who can hope to aspire with success
- to the adorable Henrietta who has had an offer from a Colonel and
- been toasted by a Baronet”--“THAT I have--” cried I. Lady Scudamore
- continued. “Ah dear Cousin replied he, I am so well convinced of the
- little Chance I can have of winning her who is adored by thousands, that
- I need no assurances of yours to make me more thoroughly so. Yet surely
- neither you or the fair Henrietta herself will deny me the exquisite
- Gratification of dieing for her, of falling a victim to her Charms. And
- when I am dead”--continued her--
- “Oh Lady Scudamore, said I wiping my eyes, that such a sweet Creature
- should talk of dieing!”
- “It is an affecting Circumstance indeed, replied Lady Scudamore.” “When
- I am dead said he, let me be carried and lain at her feet, and perhaps
- she may not disdain to drop a pitying tear on my poor remains.”
- “Dear Lady Scudamore interrupted I, say no more on this affecting
- subject. I cannot bear it.”
- “Oh! how I admire the sweet sensibility of your Soul, and as I would not
- for Worlds wound it too deeply, I will be silent.”
- “Pray go on.” said I. She did so.
- “And then added he, Ah! Cousin imagine what my transports will be when
- I feel the dear precious drops trickle on my face! Who would not die
- to haste such extacy! And when I am interred, may the divine Henrietta
- bless some happier Youth with her affection, May he be as tenderly
- attached to her as the hapless Musgrove and while HE crumbles to dust,
- May they live an example of Felicity in the Conjugal state!”
- Did you ever hear any thing so pathetic? What a charming wish, to be
- lain at my feet when he was dead! Oh! what an exalted mind he must have
- to be capable of such a wish! Lady Scudamore went on.
- “Ah! my dear Cousin replied I to him, such noble behaviour as this, must
- melt the heart of any woman however obdurate it may naturally be;
- and could the divine Henrietta but hear your generous wishes for her
- happiness, all gentle as is her mind, I have not a doubt but that she
- would pity your affection and endeavour to return it.” “Oh! Cousin
- answered he, do not endeavour to raise my hopes by such flattering
- assurances. No, I cannot hope to please this angel of a Woman, and the
- only thing which remains for me to do, is to die.” “True Love is ever
- desponding replied I, but I my dear Tom will give you even greater
- hopes of conquering this fair one's heart, than I have yet given you, by
- assuring you that I watched her with the strictest attention during the
- whole day, and could plainly discover that she cherishes in her bosom
- though unknown to herself, a most tender affection for you.”
- “Dear Lady Scudamore cried I, This is more than I ever knew!”
- “Did not I say that it was unknown to yourself? I did not, continued
- I to him, encourage you by saying this at first, that surprise might
- render the pleasure still Greater.” “No Cousin replied he in a languid
- voice, nothing will convince me that I can have touched the heart of
- Henrietta Halton, and if you are deceived yourself, do not attempt
- deceiving me.” “In short my Love it was the work of some hours for me to
- Persuade the poor despairing Youth that you had really a preference for
- him; but when at last he could no longer deny the force of my arguments,
- or discredit what I told him, his transports, his Raptures, his Extacies
- are beyond my power to describe.”
- “Oh! the dear Creature, cried I, how passionately he loves me! But dear
- Lady Scudamore did you tell him that I was totally dependant on my Uncle
- and Aunt?”
- “Yes, I told him every thing.”
- “And what did he say.”
- “He exclaimed with virulence against Uncles and Aunts; Accused the laws
- of England for allowing them to Possess their Estates when wanted by
- their Nephews or Neices, and wished HE were in the House of Commons,
- that he might reform the Legislature, and rectify all its abuses.”
- “Oh! the sweet Man! What a spirit he has!” said I.
- “He could not flatter himself he added, that the adorable Henrietta
- would condescend for his sake to resign those Luxuries and that splendor
- to which she had been used, and accept only in exchange the Comforts
- and Elegancies which his limited Income could afford her, even supposing
- that his house were in Readiness to receive her. I told him that it
- could not be expected that she would; it would be doing her an injustice
- to suppose her capable of giving up the power she now possesses and so
- nobly uses of doing such extensive Good to the poorer part of her fellow
- Creatures, merely for the gratification of you and herself.”
- “To be sure said I, I AM very Charitable every now and then. And what
- did Mr Musgrove say to this?”
- “He replied that he was under a melancholy necessity of owning the truth
- of what I said, and that therefore if he should be the happy Creature
- destined to be the Husband of the Beautiful Henrietta he must bring
- himself to wait, however impatiently, for the fortunate day, when she
- might be freed from the power of worthless Relations and able to bestow
- herself on him.”
- What a noble Creature he is! Oh! Matilda what a fortunate one I am, who
- am to be his Wife! My Aunt is calling me to come and make the pies, so
- adeiu my dear freind, and beleive me yours etc--H. Halton.
- Finis.
- *****
- SCRAPS
- To Miss FANNY CATHERINE AUSTEN
- MY Dear Neice As I am prevented by the great distance between Rowling
- and Steventon from superintending your Education myself, the care of
- which will probably on that account devolve on your Father and Mother,
- I think it is my particular Duty to Prevent your feeling as much as
- possible the want of my personal instructions, by addressing to you on
- paper my Opinions and Admonitions on the conduct of Young Women, which
- you will find expressed in the following pages.--I am my dear Neice Your
- affectionate Aunt The Author.
- THE FEMALE PHILOSOPHER
- A LETTER
- My Dear Louisa Your friend Mr Millar called upon us yesterday in his way
- to Bath, whither he is going for his health; two of his daughters were
- with him, but the eldest and the three Boys are with their Mother in
- Sussex. Though you have often told me that Miss Millar was remarkably
- handsome, you never mentioned anything of her Sisters' beauty; yet they
- are certainly extremely pretty. I'll give you their description.--Julia
- is eighteen; with a countenance in which Modesty, Sense and Dignity are
- happily blended, she has a form which at once presents you with Grace,
- Elegance and Symmetry. Charlotte who is just sixteen is shorter than her
- Sister, and though her figure cannot boast the easy dignity of
- Julia's, yet it has a pleasing plumpness which is in a different way as
- estimable. She is fair and her face is expressive sometimes of softness
- the most bewitching, and at others of Vivacity the most striking.
- She appears to have infinite Wit and a good humour unalterable; her
- conversation during the half hour they set with us, was replete with
- humourous sallies, Bonmots and repartees; while the sensible, the
- amiable Julia uttered sentiments of Morality worthy of a heart like her
- own. Mr Millar appeared to answer the character I had always received
- of him. My Father met him with that look of Love, that social Shake, and
- cordial kiss which marked his gladness at beholding an old and valued
- freind from whom thro' various circumstances he had been separated
- nearly twenty years. Mr Millar observed (and very justly too) that
- many events had befallen each during that interval of time, which gave
- occasion to the lovely Julia for making most sensible reflections on the
- many changes in their situation which so long a period had occasioned,
- on the advantages of some, and the disadvantages of others. From
- this subject she made a short digression to the instability of human
- pleasures and the uncertainty of their duration, which led her to
- observe that all earthly Joys must be imperfect. She was proceeding to
- illustrate this doctrine by examples from the Lives of great Men when
- the Carriage came to the Door and the amiable Moralist with her Father
- and Sister was obliged to depart; but not without a promise of spending
- five or six months with us on their return. We of course mentioned you,
- and I assure you that ample Justice was done to your Merits by all.
- “Louisa Clarke (said I) is in general a very pleasant Girl, yet
- sometimes her good humour is clouded by Peevishness, Envy and Spite. She
- neither wants Understanding or is without some pretensions to Beauty,
- but these are so very trifling, that the value she sets on her personal
- charms, and the adoration she expects them to be offered are at once a
- striking example of her vanity, her pride, and her folly.” So said I,
- and to my opinion everyone added weight by the concurrence of their own.
- Your affectionate Arabella Smythe.
- THE FIRST ACT OF A COMEDY
- CHARACTERS Popgun Maria Charles Pistolletta Postilion Hostess Chorus of
- ploughboys Cook and and
- Strephon Chloe
- SCENE--AN INN
- ENTER Hostess, Charles, Maria, and Cook.
- Hostess to Maria) If the gentry in the Lion should want beds, shew them
- number 9.
- Maria) Yes Mistress.--EXIT Maria
- Hostess to Cook) If their Honours in the Moon ask for the bill of fare,
- give it them.
- Cook) I wull, I wull. EXIT Cook.
- Hostess to Charles) If their Ladyships in the Sun ring their
- Bell--answerit.
- Charles) Yes Madam. EXEUNT Severally.
- SCENE CHANGES TO THE MOON, and discovers Popgun and Pistoletta.
- Pistoletta) Pray papa how far is it to London?
- Popgun) My Girl, my Darling, my favourite of all my Children, who art
- the picture of thy poor Mother who died two months ago, with whom I am
- going to Town to marry to Strephon, and to whom I mean to bequeath my
- whole Estate, it wants seven Miles.
- SCENE CHANGES TO THE SUN--
- ENTER Chloe and a chorus of ploughboys.
- Chloe) Where am I? At Hounslow.--Where go I? To London--. What to do? To
- be married--. Unto whom? Unto Strephon. Who is he? A Youth. Then I will
- sing a song.
- SONG I go to Town And when I come down, I shall be married to Streephon *
- [*Note the two e's] And that to me will be fun.
- Chorus) Be fun, be fun, be fun, And that to me will be fun.
- ENTER Cook--Cook) Here is the bill of fare.
- Chloe reads) 2 Ducks, a leg of beef, a stinking partridge, and a
- tart.--I will have the leg of beef and the partridge. EXIT Cook. And now
- I will sing another song.
- SONG--I am going to have my dinner, After which I shan't be thinner, I
- wish I had here Strephon For he would carve the partridge if it should
- be a tough one.
- Chorus) Tough one, tough one, tough one For he would carve the partridge
- if it Should be a tough one. EXIT Chloe and Chorus.--
- SCENE CHANGES TO THE INSIDE OF THE LION.
- Enter Strephon and Postilion. Streph:) You drove me from Staines to this
- place, from whence I mean to go to Town to marry Chloe. How much is your
- due?
- Post:) Eighteen pence. Streph:) Alas, my freind, I have but a bad guinea
- with which I mean to support myself in Town. But I will pawn to you an
- undirected Letter that I received from Chloe.
- Post:) Sir, I accept your offer.
- END OF THE FIRST ACT.
- A LETTER from a YOUNG LADY, whose feelings being too strong for
- her Judgement led her into the commission of Errors which her Heart
- disapproved.
- Many have been the cares and vicissitudes of my past life, my beloved
- Ellinor, and the only consolation I feel for their bitterness is that on
- a close examination of my conduct, I am convinced that I have strictly
- deserved them. I murdered my father at a very early period of my Life, I
- have since murdered my Mother, and I am now going to murder my Sister. I
- have changed my religion so often that at present I have not an idea of
- any left. I have been a perjured witness in every public tryal for these
- last twelve years; and I have forged my own Will. In short there is
- scarcely a crime that I have not committed--But I am now going to
- reform. Colonel Martin of the Horse guards has paid his Addresses to me,
- and we are to be married in a few days. As there is something singular
- in our Courtship, I will give you an account of it. Colonel Martin is
- the second son of the late Sir John Martin who died immensely rich, but
- bequeathing only one hundred thousand pound apeice to his three younger
- Children, left the bulk of his fortune, about eight Million to the
- present Sir Thomas. Upon his small pittance the Colonel lived tolerably
- contented for nearly four months when he took it into his head to
- determine on getting the whole of his eldest Brother's Estate. A new
- will was forged and the Colonel produced it in Court--but nobody would
- swear to it's being the right will except himself, and he had sworn so
- much that Nobody beleived him. At that moment I happened to be passing
- by the door of the Court, and was beckoned in by the Judge who told the
- Colonel that I was a Lady ready to witness anything for the cause of
- Justice, and advised him to apply to me. In short the Affair was soon
- adjusted. The Colonel and I swore to its' being the right will, and Sir
- Thomas has been obliged to resign all his illgotten wealth. The Colonel
- in gratitude waited on me the next day with an offer of his hand--. I am
- now going to murder my Sister. Yours Ever, Anna Parker.
- A TOUR THROUGH WALES--in a LETTER from a YOUNG LADY--
- My Dear Clara I have been so long on the ramble that I have not till now
- had it in my power to thank you for your Letter--. We left our dear home
- on last Monday month; and proceeded on our tour through Wales, which is
- a principality contiguous to England and gives the title to the Prince
- of Wales. We travelled on horseback by preference. My Mother rode upon
- our little poney and Fanny and I walked by her side or rather ran, for
- my Mother is so fond of riding fast that she galloped all the way. You
- may be sure that we were in a fine perspiration when we came to our
- place of resting. Fanny has taken a great many Drawings of the Country,
- which are very beautiful, tho' perhaps not such exact resemblances
- as might be wished, from their being taken as she ran along. It would
- astonish you to see all the Shoes we wore out in our Tour. We determined
- to take a good Stock with us and therefore each took a pair of our own
- besides those we set off in. However we were obliged to have them both
- capped and heelpeiced at Carmarthen, and at last when they were quite
- gone, Mama was so kind as to lend us a pair of blue Sattin Slippers, of
- which we each took one and hopped home from Hereford delightfully---I am
- your ever affectionate Elizabeth Johnson.
- A TALE.
- A Gentleman whose family name I shall conceal, bought a small Cottage in
- Pembrokeshire about two years ago. This daring Action was suggested to
- him by his elder Brother who promised to furnish two rooms and a Closet
- for him, provided he would take a small house near the borders of an
- extensive Forest, and about three Miles from the Sea. Wilhelminus gladly
- accepted the offer and continued for some time searching after such a
- retreat when he was one morning agreably releived from his suspence by
- reading this advertisement in a Newspaper.
- TO BE LETT A Neat Cottage on the borders of an extensive forest and
- about three Miles from the Sea. It is ready furnished except two rooms
- and a Closet.
- The delighted Wilhelminus posted away immediately to his brother, and
- shewed him the advertisement. Robertus congratulated him and sent him
- in his Carriage to take possession of the Cottage. After travelling for
- three days and six nights without stopping, they arrived at the Forest
- and following a track which led by it's side down a steep Hill over
- which ten Rivulets meandered, they reached the Cottage in half an hour.
- Wilhelminus alighted, and after knocking for some time without receiving
- any answer or hearing any one stir within, he opened the door which
- was fastened only by a wooden latch and entered a small room, which he
- immediately perceived to be one of the two that were unfurnished--From
- thence he proceeded into a Closet equally bare. A pair of stairs that
- went out of it led him into a room above, no less destitute, and these
- apartments he found composed the whole of the House. He was by no means
- displeased with this discovery, as he had the comfort of reflecting that
- he should not be obliged to lay out anything on furniture himself--. He
- returned immediately to his Brother, who took him the next day to every
- Shop in Town, and bought what ever was requisite to furnish the two
- rooms and the Closet, In a few days everything was completed, and
- Wilhelminus returned to take possession of his Cottage. Robertus
- accompanied him, with his Lady the amiable Cecilia and her two lovely
- Sisters Arabella and Marina to whom Wilhelminus was tenderly attached,
- and a large number of Attendants.--An ordinary Genius might probably
- have been embarrassed, in endeavouring to accomodate so large a party,
- but Wilhelminus with admirable presence of mind gave orders for the
- immediate erection of two noble Tents in an open spot in the Forest
- adjoining to the house. Their Construction was both simple and
- elegant--A couple of old blankets, each supported by four sticks, gave
- a striking proof of that taste for architecture and that happy ease in
- overcoming difficulties which were some of Wilhelminus's most striking
- Virtues.
- End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Love And Freindship And Other Early
- Works, by Jane Austen
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