The History of Sir Charles Grandison Part 42
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I had almost forgot to tell you, that my cousins and I are to attend the good Countess of D---- for one half hour, after we have taken leave of Lady Olivia and her aunt.
And now, my Lucy, do I shut up my correspondence with you from London.
My heart beats high with the hope of being as indulgently received by all you, my dearest friends, as I used to be after a shorter absence: for I am, and ever will be,
The grateful, dutiful, and affectionate HARRIET BYRON.
LETTER x.x.xVI
MISS BYRON, TO LADY G---- SELBY-HOUSE, MONDAY, APRIL 24.
Though the kind friends with whom I parted at Dunstable were pleased, one and all, to allow that the correspondence which is to pa.s.s between my dear Lady G---- and their Harriet, should answer the just expectations of each upon her, in the writing way; and though (at your motion, remember, not at mine) they promised to be contented with hearing read to them such parts of my letters as you should think proper to communicate; yet cannot I dispense with my duty to Lady L----, my Emily, my cousin Reeves, and Dr. Bartlett. Accordingly, I write to them by this post; and I charge you, my dear, with my sincere and thankful compliments to your lord, and to Mr. Beauchamp, for their favours.
What an agreeable night, in the main, was Friday night! Had we not been to separate next morning, it would have been an agreeable one indeed!
Is not my aunt Selby an excellent woman? But you all admired her. She admires you all. I will tell you, another time, what she said of you, my dear, in particular.
My cousin Lucy, too--is she not an amiable creature? Indeed you all were delighted with her. But I take pleasure in recollecting your approbations of one I so dearly love. She is as prudent as Lady L---- and now our Nancy is so well recovered, as cheerful as Lady G----. You said you would provide a good husband for her: don't forget. The man, whoever he be, cannot be too good for my Lucy. Nancy is such another good girl: but so I told you.
Well, and pray, did you ever meet with so pleasant a man as my uncle Selby? What should we have done, when we talked of your brother, when we talked of our parting, had it not been for him? You looked upon me every now and then, when he returned your smartness upon him, as if you thought I had let him know some of your perversenesses to Lord G----. And do you think I did not? Indeed I did. Can you imagine that your frank-hearted Harriet, who hides not from her friends her own faults, should conceal yours?--But what a particular character is yours! Every body blames you, that knows of your over-livelinesses; yet every body loves you--I think, for your very faults. Had it not been so, do you imagine I could ever have loved you, after you had led Lady L---- to join with you, on a certain teasing occasion?--My uncle dotes upon you!
But don't tell Emily that my cousin James Selby is in love with her.
That he may not, on the score of the dear girl's fortune, be thought presumptuous, let me tell you, that he is almost of age; and, when he is, comes into possession of a handsome estate. He has many good qualities.
I have, in short, a very great value for him; but not enough, though he is my relation, to wish him my still more beloved Emily. Dear creature!
Methinks I still feel her parting tears on my cheek!
You charge me to be as minute, in the letters I write to you, as I used to be to my friends here: and you promise to be as circ.u.mstantial in yours. I will set you the example: do you be sure to follow it.
We baited at Stoney Stratford. I was afraid how it would be: there were the two bold creatures, Mr. Greville, and Mr. Fenwick, ready to receive us. A handsome collation, as at our setting out, so now, bespoke by them, was set on the table. How they came by their intelligence, n.o.body knows: we were all concerned to see them. They seemed half-mad for joy.
My cousin James had alighted to hand us out; but Mr. Greville was so earnest to offer his hand, that though my cousin was equally ready, I thought I could not deny to his solicitude for the poor favour, such a mark of civility. Besides, if I had, it would have been distinguis.h.i.+ng him for more than a common neighbour, you know. Mr. Fenwick took the other hand, when I had stept out of the coach, and then (with so much pride, as made me ashamed of myself) they hurried me between them, through the inn yard, and into the room they had engaged for us; blessing themselves, all the way, for my coming down Harriet Byron.
I looked about, as if for the dear friends I had parted with at Dunstable. This is not, thought I, so delightful an inn as they made that--Now they, thought I, are pursuing their road to London, as we are ours to Northampton. But ah! where, where is Sir Charles Grandison at this time? And I sighed! But don't read this, and such strokes as this, to any body but Lord and Lady L----. You won't, you say--Thank you, Charlotte.--I will call you Charlotte, when I think of it, as you commanded me. The joy we had at Dunstable, was easy, serene, deep, full, as I may say; it was the joy of sensible people: but the joy here was made by the two gentlemen, mad, loud, and even noisy. They hardly were able to contain themselves; and my uncle, and cousin James, were forced to be loud, to be heard.
Mr. Orme, good Mr. Orme, when we came near his park, was on the highway side, perhaps near the very spot where he stood to see me pa.s.s to London so many weeks ago--Poor man!--When I first saw him, (which was before the coach came near, for I looked out only, as thinking I would mark the place where I last beheld him,) he looked with so disconsolate an air, and so fixed, that I compa.s.sionately said to myself, Surely the worthy man has not been there ever since!
I twitched the string just in time: the coach stopt. Mr. Orme, said I, how do you? Well, I hope?--How does Miss Orme?
I had my hand on the coach-door. He s.n.a.t.c.hed it. It was not an unwilling hand. He pressed it with his lips. G.o.d be praised, said he, (with a countenance, O how altered for the better!) for permitting me once more to behold that face--that angelic face, he said.
G.o.d bless you, Mr. Orme! said I: I am glad to see you. Adieu.
The coach drove on. Poor Mr. Orme! said my aunt.
Mr. Orme, Lucy, said I, don't look so ill as you wrote he was.
His joy to see you, said she--But Mr. Orme is in a declining way.
Mr. Greville, on the coach stopping, rode back just as it was going on again--And with a loud laugh--How the d----l came Orme to know of your coming, madam!--Poor fellow! It was very kind of you to stop your coach to speak to the statue. And he laughed again.--Nonsensical! At what?
My grandmamma s.h.i.+rley, dearest of parents! her youth, as she was pleased to say, renewed by the expectation of so soon seeing her darling child, came (as my aunt told us, you know) on Thursday night to Selby-house, to charge her and Lucy with her blessing to me; and resolving to stay there to receive me. Our beloved Nancy was also to be there; so were two other cousins, Kitty and Patty Holles, good young creatures; who, in my absence, had attended my grandmamma at every convenient opportunity, and whom I also found here.
When we came within sight of this house, Now, Harriet, said Lucy, I see the same kind of emotions beginning to arise in your face and bosom, as Lady G---- told us you shewed when you first saw your aunt at Dunstable.
My grandmamma! said I, I am in sight of the dear house that holds her: I hope she is here. But I will not surprise her with my joy to see her.
Lie still, throbbing impatient heart.
But when the coach set us down at the inner gate, there, in the outward-hall, sat my blessed grandmamma. The moment I beheld her, my intended caution forsook me: I sprang by my aunt, and, before the foot-step could be put down, flew, as it were, out of the coach, and threw myself at her feet, wrapping my arms about her: Bless, bless, said I, your Harriet! I could not, at the moment, say another word.
Great G.o.d! said the pious parent, her hands and eyes lifted up, Great G.o.d! I thank thee! Then folding her arms about my neck, she kissed my forehead, my cheek, my lips--G.o.d bless my love! Pride of my life! the most precious of a hundred daughters! How does my child--my Harriet--O my love!--After such dangers, such trials, such hara.s.sings--Once more, G.o.d be praised that I clasp to my fond heart, my Harriet!
Separate them, separate them, said my facetious uncle, (yet he had tears in his eyes,) before they grow together!--Madam, to my grandmamma, she is our Harriet, as well as yours: let us welcome the saucy girl, on her re-entrance into these doors!--Saucy, I suppose, I shall soon find her.
My grandmamma withdrew her fond arms: Take her, take her, said she, each in turn: but I think I never can part with her again.
My uncle saluted me, and bid me very kindly welcome home--so did every one.
How can I return the obligations which the love of all my friends lays upon me? To be good, to be grateful, is not enough; since that one ought to be for one's own sake. Yet how can I be even grateful to them with half a heart? Ah, Lady G----, you bid me be free in my confessions. You promise to look my letters over before you read them to any body; and to mark pa.s.sages proper to be kept to yourself--Pray do.
Mr. Greville and Mr. Fenwick were here separately, an hour ago: I thanked them for their civility on the road, and not ungraciously, as Mr.
Greville told my uncle, as to him. He was not, he said, without hopes, yet; since I knew not how to be ungrateful. Mr. Greville builds, as he always did, a merit on his civility; and by that means sinks, in the narrower lover, the claim he might otherwise make to the t.i.tle of the generous neighbour.
Miss Orme has just been here. She could not help throwing in a word for her brother.
You will guess, my dear Lady G----, at the subject of our conversations here, and what they will be, morning, noon, and night, for a week to come. My grandmamma is better in health than I have known her for a year or two past. The health of people in years can mend but slowly; and they are slow to acknowledge it in their own favour. My grandmamma, however, allows that she is better within these few days past; but attributes the amendment to her Harriet's return.
How do they all bless, revere, extol, your n.o.ble brother!--How do they wish--And how do they regret--you know what--Yet how ready are they to applaud your Harriet, if she can hold her magnanimity, in preferring the happiness of Clementina to her own!--My grandmamma and aunt are of opinion, that I should; and they praise me for the generosity of my effort, whether the superior merits of the man will or will not allow me to succeed in it. But my uncle, my Lucy, and my Nancy, from their unbounded love of me, think a little, and but a little, narrower; and, believing it will go hard with me, say, It is hard. My uncle, in particular, says, The very pretension is flight and nonsense: but, however, if the girl, added he, can parade away her pa.s.sion for an object so worthy, with all my heart: it will be but just, that the romancing elevations, which so often drive headstrong girls into difficulties, should now and then help a more discreet one out of them.
Adieu, my beloved Lady G----! Repeated compliments, love, thanks, to my Lord and Lady L----, to my Emily, to Dr. Bartlett, to Mr. Beauchamp, and particularly to my Lord G----. Dear, dear Charlotte, be good! Let me beseech you be good! If you are not, you will have every one of my friends who met you at Dunstable, and, from their report, my grandmamma and Nancy, against you; for they find but one fault in my lord: it is, that he seems too fond of a lady, who, by her archness of looks, and half-saucy turns upon him, even before them, evidently shewed--Shall I say what? But I stand up for you, my dear. Your grat.i.tude, your generosity, your honour, I say, (and why should I not add your duty?) will certainly make you one of the most obliging of wives, to the most affectionate of husbands.
My uncle says he hopes so: but though he adores you for a friend, and the companion of a lively hour; yet he does not know but his dame Selby is still the woman whom a man should prefer for a wife: and she, said he, is full as saucy as a wife need to be; though I think, Harriet, that she has not been the less dutiful of late for your absence.
Once more, adieu, my dear Lady G----, and continue to love your
HARRIET BYRON.
LETTER x.x.xVII
LADY G----, TO MISS BYRON THURSDAY, APRIL 27.
Every one of the Dunstable party say, that you are a grateful and good girl. Beauchamp can talk of n.o.body else of our s.e.x: I believe in my conscience he is in love with you. I think all the unprovided-for young women, wherever you come, must hate you. Was you never by surprise carried into the chamber of a friend labouring with the smallpox, in the infectious stage of it?--O, but I think you once said you had had that distemper. But your mind, Harriet, were your face to be ruined, would make you admirers. The fellows who could think of preferring even such a face to such a heart, may be turned over to the cla.s.s of insignificants.
The History of Sir Charles Grandison Part 42
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