Clarissa Harlowe; or the history of a young lady — Volume 4 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 384 pages of information about Clarissa Harlowe; or the history of a young lady — Volume 4.

Clarissa Harlowe; or the history of a young lady — Volume 4 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 384 pages of information about Clarissa Harlowe; or the history of a young lady — Volume 4.

I urged her to speak; to look up at me; to bless me with an eye more favourable.

I had reason, she told me, for my complaint of her indifference.  She saw nothing in my mind that was generous.  I was not a man to be obliged or favoured.  My strange behaviour to her since Saturday night, for no cause at all that she knew of, convinced her of this.  Whatever hopes she had conceived of me were utterly dissipated:  all my ways were disgustful to her.

This cut me to the heart.  The guilty, I believe, in every case, less patiently bear the detecting truth, than the innocent do the degrading falshood.

I bespoke her patience, while I took the liberty to account for this change on my part.—­I re-acknowledged the pride of my heart, which could not bear the thought of that want of preference in the heart of a lady whom I hoped to call mine, which she had always manifested.  Marriage, I said, was a state that was not to be entered upon with indifference on either side.

It is insolence, interrupted she, it is a presumption, Sir, to expect tokens of value, without resolving to deserve them.  You have no whining creature before you, Mr. Lovelace, overcome by weak motives, to love where there is no merit.  Miss Howe can tell you, Sir, that I never loved the faults of my friend; nor ever wished her to love me for mine.  It was a rule with us not to spare each other.  And would a man who has nothing but faults (for pray, Sir, what are your virtues?) expect that I should show a value for him?  Indeed, if I did, I should not deserve even his value; but ought to be despised by him.

Well have you, Madam, kept up to this noble manner of thinking.  You are in no danger of being despised for any marks of tenderness or favour shown to the man before you.  You have been perhaps, you’ll think, laudably studious of making and taking occasions to declare, that it was far from being owing to your choice, that you had any thoughts of me.  My whole soul, Madam, in all its errors, in all its wishes, in all its views, had been laid open and naked before you, had I been encouraged by such a share in your confidence and esteem, as would have secured me against your apprehended worst constructions of what I should from time to time have revealed to you, and consulted you upon.  For never was there a franker heart; nor a man so ready to accuse himself. [This, Belford, is true.] But you know, Madam, how much otherwise it has been between us.—­Doubt, distance, reserve, on your part, begat doubt, fear, awe, on mine.—­How little confidence! as if we apprehended each other to be a plotter rather than a lover.  How have I dreaded every letter that has been brought you from Wilson’s!—­and with reason:  since the last, from which I expected so much, on account of the proposals I had made you in writing, has, if I may judge by the effects, and by your denial of seeing me yesterday, (though you could go abroad, and in a chair too, to avoid my attendance on you,) set you against me more than ever.

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Clarissa Harlowe; or the history of a young lady — Volume 4 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.