<h2> LETTER XII </h2>
<h3> MISS HOWE, TO MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE THURSDAY MORNING, MARCH 2. </h3>
<p>Indeed you would not be in love with him for the world!—Your
servant, my dear. Nor would I have you. For, I think, with all the
advantages of person, fortune, and family, he is not by any means worthy
of you. And this opinion I give as well from the reasons you mention
(which I cannot but confirm) as from what I have heard of him but a few
hours ago from Mrs. Fortescue, a favourite of Lady Betty Lawrance, who
knows him well—but let me congratulate you, however, on your being
the first of our sex that ever I heard of, who has been able to turn that
lion, Love, at her own pleasure, into a lap-dog.</p>
<p>Well but, if you have not the throbs and the glows, you have not: and are
not in love; good reason why—because you would not be in love; and
there's no more to be said.—Only, my dear, I shall keep a good
look-out upon you; and so I hope you will be upon yourself; for it is no
manner of argument that because you would not be in love, you therefore
are not.—But before I part entirely with this subject, a word in
your ear, my charming friend—'tis only by way of caution, and in
pursuance of the general observation, that a stander-by is often a better
judge of the game than those that play.—May it not be, that you have
had, and have, such cross creatures and such odd heads to deal with, as
have not allowed you to attend to the throbs?—Or, if you had them a
little now and then, whether, having had two accounts to place them to,
you have not by mistake put them to the wrong one?</p>
<p>But whether you have a value for Lovelace or not, I know you will be
impatient to hear what Mrs. Fortescue has said of him. Nor will I keep you
longer in suspense.</p>
<p>An hundred wild stories she tells of him from childhood to manhood: for,
as she observed, having never been subject to contradiction, he was always
as mischievous as a monkey. But I shall pass over these whole hundred of
his puerile rogueries (although indicative ones, as I may say) to take
notice as well of some things you are not quite ignorant of, as of others
you know not, and to make a few observations upon him and his ways.</p>
<p>Mrs. Fortescue owns, what every body knows, 'that he is notoriously, nay,
avowedly, a man of pleasure; yet says, that in any thing he sets his heart
upon or undertakes, he is the most industrious and persevering mortal
under the sun. He rests it seems not above six hours in the twenty-four—any
more than you. He delights in writing. Whether at Lord M.'s, or at Lady
Betty's, or Lady Sarah's, he has always a pen in his fingers when he
retires. One of his companions (confirming his love of writing) has told
her, that his thoughts flow rapidly to his pen:' And you and I, my dear,
have observed, on more occasions than one, that though he writes even a
fine hand, he is one of the readiest and quickest of writers. He must
indeed have had early a very docile genius; since a person of his
pleasurable turn and active spirit, could never have submitted to take
long or great pains in attaining the qualifications he is master of;
qualifications so seldom attained by youth of quality and fortune; by such
especially of those of either, who, like him, have never known what it was
to be controuled.</p>
<p>'He had once it seems the vanity, upon being complimented on these talents
(and on his surprising diligence, for a man of pleasure) to compare
himself to Julius Caesar; who performed great actions by day, and wrote
them down at night; and valued himself, that he only wanted Caesar's
out-setting, to make a figure among his contemporaries.</p>
<p>'He spoke of this indeed, she says, with an air of pleasantry: for she
observed, and so have we, that he has the art of acknowledging his vanity
with so much humour, that it sets him above the contempt which is due to
vanity and self-opinion; and at the same time half persuades those who
hear him, that he really deserves the exultation he gives himself.'</p>
<p>But supposing it to be true that all his vacant nightly hours are employed
in writing, what can be his subjects? If, like Caesar, his own actions, he
must undoubtedly be a very enterprising and very wicked man; since nobody
suspects him to have a serious turn; and, decent as he is in his
conversation with us, his writings are not probably such as would redound
either to his own honour, or to the benefit of others, were they to be
read. He must be conscious of this, since Mrs. Fortescue says, 'that in
the great correspondence by letters which he holds, he is as secret and as
careful as if it were of a treasonable nature;—yet troubles not his
head with politics, though nobody knows the interests of princes and
courts better than he is said to do.'</p>
<p>That you and I, my dear, should love to write, is no wonder. We have
always, from the time each could hold a pen, delighted in epistolary
correspondencies. Our employments are domestic and sedentary; and we can
scribble upon twenty innocent subjects, and take delight in them because
they are innocent; though were they to be seen, they might not much profit
or please others. But that such a gay, lively young fellow as this, who
rides, hunts, travels, frequents the public entertainments, and has means
to pursue his pleasures, should be able to set himself down to write for
hours together, as you and I have heard him say he frequently does, that
is the strange thing.</p>
<p>Mrs. Fortescue says, 'that he is a complete master of short-hand writing.'
By the way, what inducements could a swift writer as he have to learn
short-hand!</p>
<p>She says (and we know it as well as she) 'that he has a surprising memory,
and a very lively imagination.'</p>
<p>Whatever his other vices are, all the world, as well as Mrs. Fortescue,
says, 'he is a sober man. And among all his bad qualities, gaming, that
great waster of time as well as fortune, is not his vice:' So that he must
have his head as cool, and his reason as clear, as the prime of youth and
his natural gaiety will permit; and by his early morning hours, a great
portion of time upon his hands to employ in writing, or worse.</p>
<p>Mrs. Fortescue says, 'he has one gentleman who is more his intimate and
correspondent than any of the rest.' You remember what his dismissed
bailiff said of him and of his associates.* I don't find but that Mrs.
Fortescue confirms this part of it, 'that all his relations are afraid of
him; and that his pride sets him above owing obligations to them. She
believes he is clear of the world; and that he will continue so;' No doubt
from the same motive that makes him avoid being obliged to his relations.</p>
<p>* Letter IV.</p>
<p>A person willing to think favourably of him would hope, that a brave, a
learned, and a diligent, man, cannot be naturally a bad man.—But if
he be better than his enemies say he is (and if worse he is bad indeed) he
is guilty of an inexcusable fault in being so careless as he is of his
reputation. I think a man can be so but from one of these two reasons:
either that he is conscious he deserves the ill spoken of him; or, that he
takes a pride in being thought worse than he is. Both very bad and
threatening indications; since the first must shew him to be utterly
abandoned; and it is but natural to conclude from the other, that what a
man is not ashamed to have imputed to him, he will not scruple to be
guilty of whenever he has an opportunity.</p>
<p>Upon the whole, and upon all I could gather from Mrs. Fortescue, Mr.
Lovelace is a very faulty man. You and I have thought him too gay, too
inconsiderate, too rash, too little an hypocrite, to be deep. You see he
never would disguise his natural temper (haughty as it certainly is) with
respect to your brother's behaviour to him. Where he thinks a contempt
due, he pays it to the uttermost. Nor has he complaisance enough to spare
your uncles.</p>
<p>But were he deep, and ever so deep, you would soon penetrate him, if they
would leave you to yourself. His vanity would be your clue. Never man had
more: Yet, as Mrs. Fortescue observed, 'never did man carry it off so
happily.' There is a strange mixture in it of humourous vivacity:—Since
but for one half of what he says of himself, when he is in the vein, any
other man would be insufferable.</p>
<p>***</p>
<p>Talk of the devil, is an old saying. The lively wretch has made me a
visit, and is but just gone away. He is all impatience and resentment at
the treatment you meet with, and full of apprehensions too, that they will
carry their point with you.</p>
<p>I told him my opinion, that you will never be brought to think of such a
man as Solmes; but that it will probably end in a composition, never to
have either.</p>
<p>No man, he said, whose fortunes and alliances are so considerable, ever
had so little favour from a woman for whose sake he had borne so much.</p>
<p>I told him my mind as freely as I used to do. But whoever was in fault,
self being judge? He complained of spies set upon his conduct, and to pry
into his life and morals, and this by your brother and uncles.</p>
<p>I told him, that this was very hard upon him; and the more so, as neither
his life nor morals perhaps would stand a fair inquiry.</p>
<p>He smiled, and called himself my servant.—The occasion was too fair,
he said, for Miss Howe, who never spared him, to let it pass.—But,
Lord help the shallow souls of the Harlowes! Would I believe it! they were
for turning plotters upon him. They had best take care he did not pay them
in their own coin. Their hearts were better turned for such works than
their heads.</p>
<p>I asked him, If he valued himself upon having a head better turned than
theirs for such works, as he called them?</p>
<p>He drew off: and then ran into the highest professions of reverence and
affection for you.</p>
<p>The object so meritorious, who can doubt the reality of his professions?</p>
<p>Adieu, my dearest, my noble friend!—I love and admire you for the
generous conclusion of your last more than I can express. Though I began
this letter with impertinent raillery, knowing that you always loved to
indulge my mad vein; yet never was there a heart that more glowed with
friendly love, than that of</p>
<p>Your own ANNA HOWE.</p>
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