<p>A.H. <SPAN name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006"></SPAN></p>
<h2> LETTER IV </h2>
<h3> MISS HOWE, TO MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE THURSDAY MORN. 10 O'CLOCK (MAR. 23). </h3>
<p>I will postpone, or perhaps pass by, several observations which I had to
make on other parts of your letters; to acquaint you, that Mr. Hickman,
when in London, found an opportunity to inquire after Mr. Lovelace's town
life and conversation.</p>
<p>At the Cocoa-tree, in Pall-mall, he fell in with two of his intimates, the
one named Belton, the other Mowbray; both very free of speech, and
probably as free in their lives: but the waiters paid them great respect,
and on Mr. Hickman's inquiry after their characters, called them men of
fortune and honour.</p>
<p>They began to talk of Mr. Lovelace of their own accord; and upon some
gentlemen in the room asking, when they expected him in town, answered,
that very day. Mr. Hickman (as they both went on praising Lovelace) said,
he had indeed heard, that Mr. Lovelace was a very fine gentleman—and
was proceeding, when one of them, interrupting him, said,—Only, Sir,
the finest gentleman in the world; that's all.</p>
<p>And so he led them on to expatiate more particularly on his qualities;
which they were very fond of doing: but said not one single word in behalf
of his morals—Mind that also, in your uncle's style.</p>
<p>Mr. Hickman said, that Mr. Lovelace was very happy, as he understood, in
the esteem of the ladies; and smiling, to make them believe he did not
think amiss of it, that he pushed his good fortune as far as it would go.</p>
<p>Well put, Mr. Hickman! thought I; equally grave and sage—thou
seemest not to be a stranger to their dialect, as I suppose this is. But I
said nothing; for I have often tried to find out this might sober man of
my mother's: but hitherto have only to say, that he is either very moral,
or very cunning.</p>
<p>No doubt of it, replied one of them; and out came an oath, with a Who
would not?—That he did as every young fellow would do.</p>
<p>Very true! said my mother's puritan—but I hear he is in treaty with
a fine lady—</p>
<p>So he was, Mr. Belton said—The devil fetch her! [vile brute!] for
she engrossed all his time—but that the lady's family ought to be—something—[Mr.
Hickman desired to be excused repeating what—though he had repeated
what was worse] and might dearly repent their usage of a man of his family
and merit.</p>
<p>Perhaps they may think him too wild, cries Hickman: and theirs is, I hear,
a very sober family—</p>
<p>SOBER! said one of them: A good honest word, Dick!—Where the devil
has it lain all this time?—D—— me if I have heard of it
in this sense ever since I was at college! and then, said he, we bandied
it about among twenty of us as an obsolete.</p>
<p>These, my dear, are Mr. Lovelace's companions: you'll be pleased to take
notice of that!</p>
<p>Mr. Hickman said, this put him out of countenance.</p>
<p>I stared at him, and with such a meaning in my eyes, as he knew how to
take; and so was out of countenance again.</p>
<p>Don't you remember, my dear, who it was that told a young gentleman
designed for the gown, who owned that he was apt to be too easily put out
of countenance when he came into free company, 'That it was a bad sign;
that it looked as if his morals were not proof; but that his good
disposition seemed rather the effect of accident and education, than of
such a choice as was founded upon principle?' And don't you know the
lesson the very same young lady gave him, 'To endeavour to stem and
discountenance vice, and to glory in being an advocate in all companies
for virtue;' particularly observing, 'That it was natural for a man to
shun or to give up what he was ashamed of?' Which she should be sorry to
think his case on this occasion: adding, 'That vice was a coward, and
would hide its head, when opposed by such a virtue as had presence of
mind, and a full persuasion of its own rectitude to support it.' The lady,
you may remember, modestly put her doctrine into the mouth of a worthy
preacher, Dr. Lewen, as she used to do, when she has a mind not to be
thought what she is at so early an age; and that it may give more weight
to any thing she hit upon, that might appear tolerable, was her modest
manner of speech.</p>
<p>Mr. Hickman, upon the whole, professed to me, upon his second recovery,
that he had no reason to think well of Mr. Lovelace's morals, from what he
heard of him in town; yet his two intimates talked of his being more
regular than he used to be. That he had made a very good resolution, that
of old Tom Wharton, was the expression, That he would never give a
challenge, nor refuse one; which they praised in him highly: that, in
short, he was a very brave fellow, and the most agreeable companion in the
world: and would one day make a great figure in his country; since there
was nothing he was not capable of—</p>
<p>I am afraid that his last assertion is too true. And this, my dear, is all
that Mr. Hickman could pick up about him: And is it not enough to
determine such a mind as yours, if not already determined?</p>
<p>Yet it must be said too, that if there be a woman in the world that can
reclaim him, it is you. And, by your account of his behaviour in the
interview between you, I own I have some hope of him. At least, this I
will say, that all the arguments he then used with you, seemed to be just
and right. And if you are to be his—But no more of that: he cannot,
after all, deserve you.</p>
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