back on the whole of his conduct, and comparing it
with his general character; and find that he is more consistently, more
uniformly, mean, revengeful, and proud, than either of us once imagined.
From his cradle, as I may say, as an only child, and a boy, humoursome,
spoiled, mischievous; the governor of his governors.
A libertine in his riper years, hardly regardful of appearances; and
despising the sex in general, for the faults of particulars of it, who
made themselves too cheap to him.
What has been his behaviour in your family?--a CLARISSA in view, (from
the time your foolish brother was obliged to take a life from him,)
but defiance for defiances. Getting you into his power by terror, by
artifice. What politeness can be expected from such a man?
Well, but what in such a situation is to be done? Why, you must
despise him: you must hate him, if you can, and run away from him--But
whither?--Whither indeed, now that your brother is laying foolish plots
to put you in a still worse condition, as it may happen.
But if you cannot despise and hate him--if you care not to break with
him, you must part with some punctilio's. And if the so doing bring
not on the solemnity, you must put yourself into the protection of the
ladies of his family.
Their respect for you is of itself a security for his honour to you, if
there could be any room for doubt. And at least, you should remind him
of his offer to bring one of the Miss Montagues to attend you at your
new lodgings in town, and accompany you till all is happily over.
This, you'll say, will be as good as declaring yourself to be his. And
so let it. You ought not now to think of any thing else but to be his.
Does not your brother's project convince you more and more of this?
Give over then, my dearest friend, any thoughts of this hopeless
reconciliation, which has kept you balancing thus long. You own, in the
letter before me, that he made very explicit offers, though you give me
not the very words. And he gave his reasons, I perceive, with his wishes
that you should accept them; which very few of the sorry fellows do,
whose plea is generally but a compliment to our self-love--That we must
love them, however presumptuous and unworthy, because they love us.
Were I in your place, and had your charming delicacies, I should,
perhaps, do as you do. No doubt but I should expect that the man
should urge me with respectful warmth; that he should supplicate with
constan
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