<h2><SPAN name="chap08"></SPAN>CHAPTER VIII.<br/> In which Pen is kept waiting at the Door, while the Reader is informed who little Laura was.</h2>
<p>Once upon a time, then, there was a young gentleman of Cambridge University who
came to pass the long vacation at the village where young Helen Thistlewood was
living with her mother, the widow of the lieutenant slain at Copenhagen. This
gentleman, whose name was the Reverend Francis Bell, was nephew to Mrs.
Thistlewood, and by consequence, own cousin to Miss Helen, so that it was very
right that he should take lodgings in his aunt’s house, who lived in a
very small way; and there he passed the long vacation, reading with three or
four pupils who accompanied him to the village. Mr. Bell was fellow of a
college, and famous in the University for his learning and skill as a tutor.</p>
<p>His two kinswomen understood pretty early that the reverend gentleman was
engaged to be married, and was only waiting for a college living to enable him
to fulfil his engagement. His intended bride was the daughter of another
parson, who had acted as Mr. Bell’s own private tutor in Bell’s
early life, and it was whilst under Mr. Coacher’s roof, indeed, and when
only a boy of seventeen or eighteen years of age, that the impetuous young Bell
had flung himself at the feet of Miss Martha Coacher, whom he was helping to
pick peas in the garden. On his knees, before those peas and her, he pledged
himself to an endless affection.</p>
<p>Miss Coacher was by many years the young fellow’s senior and her own
heart had been lacerated by many previous disappointments in the matrimonial
line. No less than three pupils of her father had trifled with those young
affections. The apothecary of the village had despicably jilted her. The
dragoon officer, with whom she had danced so many many times during that happy
season which she passed at Bath with her gouty grandmamma, one day gaily shook
his bridle-rein and galloped away never to return. Wounded by the shafts of
repeated ingratitude, can it be wondered at that the heart of Martha Coacher
should pant to find rest somewhere? She listened to the proposals of the gawky
gallant honest boy, with great kindness and good-humour; at the end of his
speech she said, “Law, Bell, I’m sure you are too young to think of
such things;” but intimated that she too would revolve them in her own
virgin bosom. She could not refer Mr. Bell to her mamma, for Mr. Coacher was a
widower, and being immersed in his books, was of course unable to take the
direction of so frail and wondrous an article as a lady’s heart, which
Miss Martha had to manage for herself.</p>
<p>A lock of her hair, tied up in a piece of blue ribbon, conveyed to the happy
Bell the result of the Vestal’s conference with herself. Thrice before
had she snipt off one of her auburn ringlets, and given them away. The
possessors were faithless, but the hair had grown again: and Martha had indeed
occasion to say that men were deceivers when she handed over this token of love
to the simple boy.</p>
<p>Number 6, however, was an exception to former passions—Francis Bell was
the most faithful of lovers. When his time arrived to go to college, and it
became necessary to acquaint Mr. Coacher of the arrangements that had been
made, the latter cried, “God bless my soul, I hadn’t the least idea
what was going on;” as was indeed very likely, for he had been taken in
three times before in precisely a similar manner; and Francis went to the
University resolved to conquer honours, so as to be able to lay them at the
feet of his beloved Martha.</p>
<p>This prize in view made him labour prodigiously. News came, term after term, of
the honours he won. He sent the prize-books for his college essays to old
Coacher, and his silver declamation cup to Miss Martha. In due season he was
high among the Wranglers, and a fellow of his college; and during all the time
of these transactions a constant tender correspondence was kept up with Miss
Coacher, to whose influence, and perhaps with justice, he attributed the
successes which he had won.</p>
<p>By the time, however, when the Rev. Francis Bell, M.A., and Fellow and Tutor of
his College, was twenty-six years of age, it happened that Miss Coacher was
thirty-four, nor had her charms, her manners, or her temper improved since that
sunny day in the springtime of life when he found her picking peas in the
garden. Having achieved his honours he relaxed in the ardour of his studies,
and his judgment and tastes also perhaps became cooler. The sunshine of the
pea-garden faded away from Miss Martha, and poor Bell found himself
engaged—and his hand pledged to that bond in a thousand letters—to
a coarse, ill-tempered, ill-favoured, ill-mannered, middle-aged woman.</p>
<p>It was in consequence of one of many altercations (in which Martha’s
eloquence shone, and in which therefore she was frequently pleased to indulge)
that Francis refused to take his pupils to Bearleader’s Green, where Mr.
Coacher’s living was, and where Bell was in the habit of spending the
summer: and he bethought him that he would pass the vacation at his
aunt’s village, which he had not seen for many years—not since
little Helen was a girl and used to sit on his knee. Down then he came and
lived with them. Helen was grown a beautiful young woman now. The cousins were
nearly four months together, from June to October. They walked in the summer
evenings: they met in the early morn. They read out of the same book when the
old lady dozed at night over the candles. What little Helen knew, Frank taught
her. She sang to him: she gave her artless heart to him. She was aware of all
his story. Had he made any secret?—had he not shown the picture of the
woman to whom he was engaged, and with a blush,—her letters, hard, eager,
and cruel?—The days went on and on, happier and closer, with more
kindness, more confidence, and more pity. At last one morning in October came,
when Francis went back to college, and the poor girl felt that her tender heart
was gone with him.</p>
<p>Frank too wakened up from the delightful midsummer dream to the horrible
reality of his own pain. He gnashed and tore at the chain which bound him. He
was frantic to break it and be free. Should he confess?—give his savings
to the woman to whom he was bound, and beg his release?—there was time
yet—he temporised. No living might fall in for years to come. The cousins
went on corresponding sadly and fondly: the betrothed woman, hard, jealous, and
dissatisfied, complaining bitterly, and with reason, of her Francis’s
altered tone.</p>
<p>At last things came to a crisis, and the new attachment was discovered. Francis
owned it, cared not to disguise it, rebuked Martha with her violent temper and
angry imperiousness, and, worst of all, with her inferiority and her age.</p>
<p>Her reply was, that if he did not keep his promise she would carry his letters
into every court in the kingdom—letters in which his love was pledged to
her ten thousand times; and, after exposing him to the world as the perjurer
and traitor he was, she would kill herself.</p>
<p>Frank had one more interview with Helen, whose mother was dead then, and who
was living companion with old Lady Pontypool,—one more interview, where
it was resolved that he was to do his duty; that is, to redeem his vow; that
is, to pay a debt cozened from him by a sharper; that is, to make two honest
people miserable. So the two judged their duty to be, and they parted.</p>
<p>The living fell in only too soon; but yet Frank Bell was quite a grey and
worn-out man when he was inducted into it. Helen wrote him a letter on his
marriage, beginning “My dear Cousin,” and ending “always
truly yours.” She sent him back the other letters, and the lock of his
hair—all but a small piece. She had it in her desk when she was talking
to the Major.</p>
<p>Bell lived for three or four years in his living, at the end of which time, the
Chaplainship of Coventry Island falling vacant, Frank applied for it privately,
and having procured it, announced the appointment to his wife. She objected, as
she did to everything. He told her bitterly that he did not want her to come:
so she went. Bell went out in Governor Crawley’s time, and was very
intimate with that gentleman in his later years. And it was in Coventry Island,
years after his own marriage, and five years after he had heard of the birth of
Helen’s boy, that his own daughter was born.</p>
<p>She was not the daughter of the first Mrs. Bell, who died of island fever very
soon after Helen Pendennis and her husband, to whom Helen had told everything,
wrote to inform Bell of the birth of their child. “I was old, was
I?” said Mrs. Bell the first; “I was old, and her inferior, was I?
but I married you, Mr. Bell, and kept you from marrying her?” and
hereupon she died. Bell married a colonial lady, whom he loved fondly. But he
was not doomed to prosper in love; and, this lady dying in childbirth, Bell
gave up too: sending his little girl home to Helen Pendennis and her husband,
with a parting prayer that they would befriend her.</p>
<p>The little thing came to Fairoaks from Bristol, which is not very far off,
dressed in black, and in company of a soldier’s wife, her nurse, at
parting from whom she wept bitterly. But she soon dried up her grief under
Helen’s motherly care.</p>
<p>Round her neck she had a locket with hair, which Helen had given, ah how many
years ago! to poor Francis, dead and buried. This child was all that was left
of him, and she cherished, as so tender a creature would, the legacy which he
had bequeathed to her. The girl’s name, as his dying letter stated, was
Helen Laura. But John Pendennis, though he accepted the trust, was always
rather jealous of the orphan; and gloomily ordered that she should be called by
her own mother’s name; and not by that first one which her father had
given her. She was afraid of Mr. Pendennis, to the last moment of his life. And
it was only when her husband was gone that Helen dared openly to indulge in the
tenderness which she felt for the little girl.</p>
<p>Thus it was that Laura Bell became Mrs. Pendennis’s daughter. Neither her
husband nor that gentleman’s brother, the Major, viewed her with very
favourable eyes. She reminded the first of circumstances in his wife’s
life which he was forced to accept, but would have forgotten much more
willingly and as for the second, how could he regard her? She was neither
related to his own family of Pendennis, nor to any nobleman in this empire, and
she had but a couple of thousand pounds for her fortune.</p>
<p>And now let Mr. Pen come in, who has been waiting all this while.</p>
<p>Having strung up his nerves, and prepared himself, without at the door, for the
meeting, he came to it, determined to face the awful uncle. He had settled in
his mind that the encounter was to be a fierce one, and was resolved on bearing
it through with all the courage and dignity of the famous family which he
represented. And he flung open the door and entered with the most severe and
warlike expression, armed cap-a-pie as it were, with lance couched and plumes
displayed, and glancing at his adversary, as if to say, “Come on,
I’m ready.”</p>
<p>The old man of the world, as he surveyed the boy’s demeanour, could
hardly help a grin at his admirable pompous simplicity. Major Pendennis too had
examined his ground; and finding that the widow was already half won over to
the enemy, and having a shrewd notion that threats and tragic exhortations
would have no effect upon the boy, who was inclined to be perfectly stubborn
and awfully serious, the Major laid aside the authoritative manner at once, and
with the most good-humoured natural smile in the world, held out his hands to
Pen, shook the lad’s passive fingers gaily, and said, “Well, Pen,
my boy, tell us all about it.”</p>
<p>Helen was delighted with the generosity of the Major’s good-humour. On
the contrary, it quite took aback and disappointed poor Pen, whose nerves were
strung up for a tragedy, and who felt that his grand entree was altogether
baulked and ludicrous. He blushed and winced with mortified vanity and
bewilderment. He felt immensely inclined to begin to
cry—“I—I—I didn’t know that you were come till
just now,” he said: “is—is—town very full, I
suppose?”</p>
<p>If Pen could hardly gulp his tears down, it was all the Major could do to keep
from laughter. He turned round and shot a comical glance at Mrs. Pendennis, who
too felt that the scene was at once ridiculous and sentimental. And so, having
nothing to say, she went up and kissed Mr. Pen: as he thought of her tenderness
and soft obedience to his wishes, it is very possible too the boy was melted.</p>
<p>“What a couple of fools they are,” thought the old guardian.
“If I hadn’t come down, she would have driven over in state to pay
a visit and give her blessing to the young lady’s family.”</p>
<p>“Come, come,” said he, still grinning at the couple, “let us
have as little sentiment as possible, and, Pen, my good fellow, tell us the
whole story.”</p>
<p>Pen got back at once to his tragic and heroical air. “The story is,
sir,” said he, “as I have written it to you before. I have made the
acquaintance of a most beautiful and most virtuous lady; of a high family,
although in reduced circumstances: I have found the woman in whom I know that
the happiness of my life is centred; I feel that I never, never can think about
any woman but her. I am aware of the difference of our ages and other
difficulties in my way. But my affection was so great that I felt I could
surmount all these; that we both could: and she has consented to unite her lot
with mine, and to accept my heart and my fortune.”</p>
<p>“How much is that, my boy?” said the Major. “Has anybody left
you some money? I don’t know that you are worth a shilling in the
world.”</p>
<p>“You know what I have is his,” cried out Mrs. Pendennis.</p>
<p>“Good heavens, madam, hold your tongue!” was what the guardian was
disposed to say; but he kept his temper, not without a struggle. “No
doubt, no doubt,” he said. “You would sacrifice anything for him.
Everybody knows that. But it is, after all then, your fortune which Pen is
offering to the young lady; and of which he wishes to take possession at
eighteen.”</p>
<p>“I know my mother will give me anything,” Pen said, looking rather
disturbed.</p>
<p>“Yes, my good fellow, but there is reason in all things. If your mother
keeps the house, it is but fair that she should select her company. When you
give her house over her head, and transfer her banker’s account to
yourself for the benefit of Miss What-d’-you-call-’em—Miss
Costigan—don’t you think you should at least have consulted my
sister as one of the principal parties in the transaction? I am speaking to
you, you see, without the least anger or assumption of authority, such as the
law and your father’s will give me over you for three years to
come—but as one man of the world to another,—and I ask you, if you
think that, because you can do what you like with your mother, therefore you
have a right to do so? As you are her dependent, would it not have been more
generous to wait before you took this step, and at least to have paid her the
courtesy to ask her leave?”</p>
<p>Pen held down his head, and began dimly to perceive that the action on which he
had prided himself as a most romantic, generous instance of disinterested
affection, was perhaps a very selfish and headstrong piece of folly.</p>
<p>“I did it in a moment of passion,” said Pen, floundering; “I
was not aware what I was going to say or to do” (and in this he spoke
with perfect sincerity) “But now it is said, and I stand to it. No; I
neither can nor will recall it. I’ll die rather than do so. And I—I
don’t want to burthen my mother,” he continued. “I’ll
work for myself. I’ll go on the stage, and act with her. She—she
says I should do well there.”</p>
<p>“But will she take you on those terms?” the Major interposed.
“Mind, I do not say that Miss Costigan is not the most disinterested of
women: but, don’t you suppose now, fairly, that your position as a young
gentleman of ancient birth and decent expectations forms a part of the cause
why she finds your addresses welcome?”</p>
<p>“I’ll die, I say, rather than forfeit my pledge to her,” said
Pen, doubling his fists and turning red.</p>
<p>“Who asks you, my dear friend?” answered the imperturbable
guardian. “No gentleman breaks his word, of course, when it has been
given freely. But after all, you can wait. You owe something to your mother,
something to your family—something to me as your father’s
representative.”</p>
<p>“Oh, of course,” Pen said, feeling rather relieved.</p>
<p>“Well, as you have pledged your word to her, give us another, will you
Arthur?”</p>
<p>“What is it?” Arthur asked.</p>
<p>“That you will make no private marriage—that you won’t be
taking a trip to Scotland, you understand.”</p>
<p>“That would be a falsehood. Pen never told his mother a falsehood,”
Helen said.</p>
<p>Pen hung down his head again, and his eyes filled with tears of shame. Had not
this whole intrigue been a falsehood to that tender and confiding creature who
was ready to give up all for his sake? He gave his uncle his hand.</p>
<p>“No, sir—on my word of honour, as a gentleman,” he said,
“I will never marry without my mother’s consent!” and giving
Helen a bright parting look of confidence and affection unchangeable, the boy
went out of the drawing-room into his own study.</p>
<p>“He’s an angel—he’s an angel,” the mother cried
out in one of her usual raptures.</p>
<p>“He comes of a good stock, ma’am,” said her
brother-in-law—“of a good stock on both sides.” The Major was
greatly pleased with the result of his diplomacy—so much so, that he once
more saluted the tips of Mrs. Pendennis’s glove, and dropping the curt,
manly, and straightforward tone in which he had conducted the conversation with
the lad, assumed a certain drawl which he always adopted when he was most
conceited and fine.</p>
<p>“My dear creature,” said he, in that his politest tone, “I
think it certainly as well that I came down, and I flatter myself that last
botte was a successful one. I tell you how I came to think of it. Three years
ago my kind friend Lady Ferrybridge sent for me in the greatest state of alarm
about her son Gretna, whose affair you remember, and implored me to use my
influence with the young gentleman, who was engaged in an affaire de coeur with
a Scotch clergyman’s daughter, Miss MacToddy. I implored, I entreated
gentle measures. But Lord Ferrybridge was furious, and tried the high hand.
Gretna was sulky and silent, and his parents thought they had conquered. But
what was the fact, my dear creature? The young people had been married for
three months before Lord Ferrybridge knew anything about it. And that was why I
extracted the promise from Master Pen.”</p>
<p>“Arthur would never have done so,” Mrs. Pendennis said.</p>
<p>“He hasn’t,—that is one comfort,” answered the
brother-in-law.</p>
<p>Like a wary and patient man of the world, Major Pendennis did not press poor
Pen any farther for the moment, but hoped the best from time, and that the
young fellow’s eyes would be opened before long to see the absurdity of
which he was guilty. And having found out how keen the boy’s point of
honour was, he worked kindly upon that kindly feeling with great skill,
discoursing him over their wine after dinner, and pointing out to Pen the
necessity of a perfect uprightness and openness in all his dealings, and
entreating that his communications with his interesting young friend (as the
Major politely called Miss Fotheringay) should be carried on with the
knowledge, if not approbation, of Mrs. Pendennis. “After all, Pen,”
the Major said, with a convenient frankness that did not displease the boy,
whilst it advanced the interests of the negotiator, “you must bear in
mind that you are throwing yourself away. Your mother may submit to your
marriage as she would to anything else you desired, if you did but cry long
enough for it: but be sure of this, that it can never please her. You take a
young woman off the boards of a country theatre and prefer her, for such is the
case, to one of the finest ladies in England. And your mother will submit to
your choice, but you can’t suppose that she will be happy under it. I
have often fancied, entre nous, that my sister had it in her eye to make a
marriage between you and that little ward of hers—Flora,
Laura—what’s her name? And I always determined to do my small
endeavour to prevent any such match. The child has but two thousand pounds, I
am given to understand. It is only with the utmost economy and care that my
sister can provide for the decent maintenance of her house, and for your
appearance and education as a gentleman; and I don’t care to own to you
that I had other and much higher views for you. With your name and birth,
sir—with your talents, which I suppose are respectable, with the friends
whom I have the honour to possess, I could have placed you in an excellent
position—a remarkable position for a young man of such exceeding small
means, and had hoped to see you, at least, try to restore the honours of our
name. Your mother’s softness stopped one prospect, or you might have been
a general, like our gallant ancestor who fought at Ramillies and Malplaquet. I
had another plan in view: my excellent and kind friend, Lord Bagwig, who is
very well disposed towards me, would, I have little doubt, have attached you to
his mission at Pumpernickel, and you might have advanced in the diplomatic
service. But, pardon me for recurring to the subject; how is a man to serve a
young gentleman of eighteen, who proposes to marry a lady of thirty, whom he
has selected from a booth in a fair?—well, not a fair,—a barn. That
profession at once is closed to you. The public service is closed to you.
Society is closed to you. You see, my good friend, to what you bring yourself.
You may get on at the bar to be sure, where I am given to understand that
gentlemen of merit occasionally marry out of their kitchens; but in no other
profession. Or you may come and live down here—down here, mon Dieu! for
ever” (said the Major, with a dreary shrug, as he thought with
inexpressible fondness of Pall Mall), “where your mother will receive the
Mrs. Arthur that is to be, with perfect kindness; where the good people of the
county won’t visit you; and where, by Gad, sir, I shall be shy of
visiting you myself, for I’m a plain-spoken man, and I own to you that I
like to live with gentlemen for my companions; where you will have to live,
with rum-and-water—drinking gentlemen—farmers, and drag through
your life the young husband of an old woman, who, if she doesn’t quarrel
with your mother, will at least cost that lady her position in society, and
drag her down into that dubious caste into which you must inevitably fall. It
is no affair of mine, my good sir. I am not angry. Your downfall will not hurt
me farther than that it will extinguish the hopes I had of seeing my family
once more taking its place in the world. It is only your mother and yourself
that will be ruined. And I pity you both from my soul. Pass the claret: it is
some I sent to your poor father; I remember I bought it at poor Lord
Levant’s sale. But of course,” added the Major, smacking the wine,
“having engaged yourself, you will do what becomes you as a man of
honour, however fatal your promise may be. However, promise us on our side, my
boy, what I set out by entreating you to grant,—that there shall be
nothing clandestine, that you will pursue your studies, that you will only
visit your interesting friend at proper intervals. Do you write to her
much?”</p>
<p>Pen blushed and said, “Why, yes, he had written.”</p>
<p>“I suppose verses, eh! as well as prose? I was a dab at verses myself. I
recollect when I first joined, I used to write verses for the fellows in the
regiment; and did some pretty things in that way. I was talking to my old
friend General Hobbler about some lines I dashed off for him in the year 1806,
when we were at the Cape, and, Gad, he remembered every line of them still; for
he’d used ’em so often, the old rogue, and had actually tried
’em on Mrs. Hobbler, sir—who brought him sixty thousand pounds. I
suppose you’ve tried verses, eh, Pen?”</p>
<p>Pen blushed again, and said, “Why, yes, he had written verses.”</p>
<p>“And does the fair one respond in poetry or prose?” asked the
Major, eyeing his nephew with the queerest expression, as much as to say,
“O Moses and Green Spectacles! what a fool the boy is.”</p>
<p>Pen blushed again. She had written, but not in verse, the young lover owned,
and he gave his breast-pocket the benefit of a squeeze with his left arm, which
the Major remarked, according to his wont.</p>
<p>“You have got the letters there, I see,” said the old campaigner,
nodding at Pen and pointing to his own chest (which was manfully wadded with
cotton by Mr. Stultz). “You know you have. I would give twopence to see
’em.”</p>
<p>“Why,” said Pen, twiddling the stalks of the strawberries,
“I—I,” but this sentence never finished; for Pen’s face
was so comical and embarrassed, as the Major watched it, that the elder could
contain his gravity no longer, and burst into a fit of laughter, in which
chorus Pen himself was obliged to join after a minute: when he broke out fairly
into a guffaw.</p>
<p>It sent them with great good-humour into Mrs. Pendennis’s drawing-room.
She was pleased to hear them laughing in the hall as they crossed it.</p>
<p>“You sly rascal!” said the Major, putting his arm gaily on
Pen’s shoulder, and giving a playful push at the boy’s
breast-pocket. He felt the papers crackling there sure enough. The young fellow
was delighted—conceited—triumphant—and in one word, a spoony.</p>
<p>The pair came to the tea-table in the highest spirits. The Major’s
politeness was beyond expression. He had never tasted such good tea, and such
bread was only to be had in the country. He asked Mrs. Pendennis for one of her
charming songs. He then made Pen sing, and was delighted and astonished at the
beauty of the boy’s voice: he made his nephew fetch his maps and
drawings, and praised them as really remarkable works of talent in a young
fellow: he complimented him on his French pronunciation: he flattered the
simple boy as adroitly as ever lover flattered a mistress: and when bedtime
came, mother and son went to their several rooms perfectly enchanted with the
kind Major.</p>
<p>When they had reached those apartments, I suppose Helen took to her knees as
usual: and Pen read over his letters before going to bed: just as if he
didn’t know every word of them by heart already. In truth there were but
three of those documents and to learn their contents required no great effort
of memory.</p>
<p>In No. 1, Miss Fotheringay presents grateful compliments to Mr. Pendennis, and
in her papa’s name and her own begs to thank him for his most beautiful
presents. They will always be kept carefully; and Miss F. and Captain C. will
never forget the delightful evening which they passed on Tuesday last.</p>
<p>No. 2 said—Dear Sir, we shall have a small quiet party of social friends
at our humble board, next Tuesday evening, at an early tea, when I shall wear
the beautiful scarf which, with its accompanying delightful verses, I shall
ever, ever cherish: and papa bids me say how happy he will be if you will join
‘the feast of reason and the flow of soul’ in our festive little
party, as I am sure will be your truly grateful Emily Fotheringay.</p>
<p>No. 3 was somewhat more confidential, and showed that matters had proceeded
rather far. You were odious yesterday night, the letter said. Why did you not
come to the stage-door? Papa could not escort me on account of his eye; he had
an accident, and fell down over a loose carpet on the stair on Sunday night. I
saw you looking at Miss Diggle all night; and you were so enchanted with Lydia
Languish you scarcely once looked at Julia. I could have crushed Bingley, I was
so angry. I play Ella Rosenberg on Friday: will you come then? Miss Diggle
performs—ever your E. F.</p>
<p>These three letters Mr. Pen used to read at intervals, during the day and
night, and embrace with that delight and fervour which such beautiful
compositions surely warranted. A thousand times at least he had kissed fondly
the musky satin paper, made sacred to him by the hand of Emily Fotheringay.
This was all he had in return for his passion and flames, his vows and
protests, his rhymes and similes, his wakeful nights and endless thoughts, his
fondness, fears and folly. The young wiseacre had pledged away his all for
this: signed his name to endless promissory notes, conferring his heart upon
the bearer: bound himself for life, and got back twopence as an equivalent. For
Miss Costigan was a young lady of such perfect good-conduct and self-command,
that she never would have thought of giving more, and reserved the treasures of
her affection until she could transfer them lawfully at church.</p>
<p>Howbeit, Mr. Pen was content with what tokens of regard he had got, and mumbled
over his three letters in a rapture of high spirits, and went to sleep
delighted with his kind old uncle from London, who must evidently yield to his
wishes in time; and, in a word, in a preposterous state of contentment with
himself and all the world.</p>
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