Cecilia; Or, Memoirs of an Heiress — Volume 2 eBook
Fanny Burney
Away she flew, and Cecilia, who had no power to prevent
her, finding her spirits unequal either to another
parting, or to the raillery of Lady Honoria, should
Mortimer, for his own sake, avoid it, took refuge
in flight, and seizing an umbrella, escaped into the
park; where, to perplex any pursuers, instead of chusing
her usual walk, she directed her steps to a thick
and unfrequented wood, and never rested till she was
more than two miles from the house. Fidel, however,
who now always accompanied her, ran by her side, and,
when she thought herself sufficiently distant and
private to be safe, she sat down under a tree, and
caressing her faithful favourite, soothed her own tenderness
by lamenting that he had lost his master; and,
having now no part to act, and no dignity to support,
no observation to fear, and no inference to guard
against, she gave vent to her long smothered emotions,
by weeping without caution or restraint.
She had met with an object whose character answered
all her wishes for him with whom she should entrust
her fortune, and whose turn of mind, so similar to
her own, promised her the highest domestic felicity:
to this object her affections had involuntarily bent,
they were seconded by esteem, and unchecked by any
suspicion of impropriety in her choice: she had
found too, in return, that his heart was all her own:
her birth, indeed, was inferior, but it was not disgraceful;
her disposition, education and temper seemed equal
to his fondest wishes: yet, at the very time
when their union appeared most likely, when they mixed
with the same society, and dwelt under the same roof,
when the father to one, was the guardian to the other,
and interest seemed to invite their alliance even
more than affection, the young man himself, without
counsel or command, could tear himself from her presence
by an effort all his own, forbear to seek her heart,
and almost charge her not to grant it, and determining
upon voluntary exile, quit his country and his connections
with no view, and for no reason, but merely that he
might avoid the sight of her he loved!
Though the motive for this conduct was now no longer
unknown to her, she neither thought it satisfactory
nor necessary; yet, while she censured his flight,
she bewailed his loss, and though his inducement was
repugnant to her opinion, his command over his passions
she admired and applauded.
CHAPTER xi.
A WORRY.
Cecilia continued in this private spot, happy at least
to be alone, till she was summoned by the dinner bell
to return home.
As soon as she entered the parlour, where every body
was assembled before her, she observed, by the countenance
of Mrs Delvile, that she had passed the morning as
sadly as herself.
“Miss Beverley,” cried Lady Honoria, before
she was seated, “I insist upon your taking my
place to-day.” “Why so, madam?”
“Because I cannot suffer you to sit by a window
with such a terrible cold.”
Copyrights
Cecilia; Or, Memoirs of an Heiress — Volume 2 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.