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<h2> LETTER XX </h2>
<h3> MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE, TO MISS HOWE WEDNESDAY MORNING, NINE O'CLOCK. </h3>
<p>I am just returned from my morning walk, and already have received a
letter from Mr. Lovelace in answer to mine deposited last night. He must
have had pen, ink, and paper with him; for it was written in the coppice;
with this circumstance: On one knee, kneeling with the other. Not from
reverence to the written to, however, as you'll find!</p>
<p>Well we are instructed early to keep these men at distance. An undesigning
open heart, where it is loth to disoblige, is easily drawn in, I see, to
oblige more than ever it designed. It is too apt to govern itself by what
a bold spirit is encouraged to expect of it. It is very difficult for a
good-natured young person to give a negative where it disesteems not.</p>
<p>Our hearts may harden and contract, as we gain experience, and when we
have smarted perhaps for our easy folly: and so they ought, or we should
be upon very unequal terms with the world.</p>
<p>Excuse these grave reflections. This man has vexed me heartily. I see his
gentleness was art: fierceness, and a temper like what I have been too
much used to at home, are Nature in him. Nothing, I think, shall ever make
me forgive him; for, surely, there can be no good reason for his
impatience on an expectation given with reserve, and revocable.—I so
much to suffer through him; yet, to be treated as if I were obliged to
bear insults from him—!</p>
<p>But here you will be pleased to read his letter; which I shall enclose.</p>
<p>TO MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE GOOD GOD!</p>
<p>What is now to become of me!—How shall I support this
disappointment!—No new cause!—On one knee, kneeling with the
other, I write!—My feet benumbed with midnight wanderings through
the heaviest dews that ever fell: my wig and my linen dripping with the
hoar frost dissolving on them!—Day but just breaking—Sun not
risen to exhale—May it never rise again!—Unless it bring
healing and comfort to a benighted soul! In proportion to the joy you had
inspired (ever lovely promiser!) in such proportion is my anguish!</p>
<p>O my beloved creature!—But are not your very excuses confessions of
excuses inexcusable? I know not what I write!—That servant in your
way!* By the great God of Heaven, that servant was not, dared not, could
not, be in your way!—Curse upon the cool caution that is pleased to
deprive me of an expectation so transporting!</p>
<p>* See Letter XIX.<br/></p>
<p>And are things drawing towards a crisis between your friends and you?—Is
not this a reason for me to expect, the rather to expect, the promised
interview?</p>
<p>CAN I write all that is in my mind, say you?—Impossible!—Not
the hundredth part of what is in my mind, and in my apprehension, can I
write!</p>
<p>Oh! the wavering, the changeable sex!—But can Miss Clarissa Harlowe—</p>
<p>Forgive me, Madam!—I know not what I write!</p>
<p>Yet, I must, I do, insist upon your promise—or that you will
condescend to find better excuses for the failure—or convince me,
that stronger reasons are imposed upon you, than those you offer.—A
promise once given (upon deliberation given,) the promised only can
dispense with; except in cases of a very apparent necessity imposed upon
the promiser, which leaves no power to perform it.</p>
<p>The first promise you ever made me! Life and death perhaps depending upon
it—my heart desponding from the barbarous methods resolved to be
taken with you in malice to me!</p>
<p>You would sooner choose death than Solmes. (How my soul spurns the
competition!) O my beloved creature, what are these but words?—Whose
words?—Sweet and ever adorable—What?—Promise breaker—must
I call you?—How shall I believe the asseveration, (your supposed
duty in the question! Persecution so flaming!—Hatred to me so
strongly avowed!) after this instance of you so lightly dispensing with
your promise?</p>
<p>If, my dearest life! you would prevent my distraction, or, at least,
distracted consequences, renew the promised hope!—My fate is indeed
upon its crisis.</p>
<p>Forgive me, dearest creature, forgive me!—I know I have written in
too much anguish of mind!—Writing this, in the same moment that the
just dawning light has imparted to me the heavy disappointment.</p>
<p>I dare not re-peruse what I have written. I must deposit it. It may serve
to shew you my distracted apprehension that this disappointment is but a
prelude to the greatest of all.—Nor, having here any other paper, am
I able to write again, if I would, on this gloomy spot. (Gloomy is my
soul; and all Nature around me partakes of my gloom!)—I trust it
therefore to your goodness—if its fervour excite your displeasure
rather than your pity, you wrong my passion; and I shall be ready to
apprehend, that I am intended to be the sacrifice of more miscreants than
one! [Have patience with me, dearest creature!—I mean Solmes and
your brother only.] But if, exerting your usual generosity, you will
excuse and re appoint, may that God, whom you profess to serve, and who is
the God of truth and of promises, protect and bless you, for both; and for
restoring to himself, and to hope,</p>
<p>Your ever-adoring, yet almost desponding, LOVELACE!</p>
<p>Ivy Cavern, in the Coppice—Day but just breaking.</p>
<hr />
<p>This is the answer I shall return:</p>
<p>WEDNESDAY MORNING.</p>
<p>I am amazed, Sir, at the freedom of your reproaches. Pressed and teased,
against convenience and inclination, to give you a private meeting, am I
to be thus challenged and upbraided, and my sex reflected upon, because I
thought it prudent to change my mind?—A liberty I had reserved to
myself, when I made the appointment, as you call it. I wanted not
instances of your impatient spirit to other people: yet may it be happy
for me, that I can have this new one; which shows, that you can as little
spare me, when I pursue the dictates of my own reason, as you do others,
for acting up to theirs. Two motives you must be governed by in this
excess. The one my easiness; the other your own presumption. Since you
think you have found out the first, and have shown so much of the last
upon it, I am too much alarmed, not to wish and desire, that your letter
of this day may conclude all the trouble you had from, or for,</p>
<p>Your humble servant, CL. HARLOWE.</p>
<hr />
<p>I believe, my dear, I may promise myself your approbation, whenever I
write or speak with spirit, be it to whom it will. Indeed, I find but too
much reason to exert it, since I have to deal with people, who govern
themselves in their conduct to me, not by what is fit or decent, right or
wrong, but by what they think my temper will bear. I have, till very
lately, been praised for mine; but it has always been by those who never
gave me opportunity to return the compliment to them. Some people have
acted, as if they thought forbearance on one side absolutely necessary for
them and me to be upon good terms together; and in this case have ever
taken care rather to owe that obligation than to lay it. You have hinted
to me, that resentment is not natural to my temper, and that therefore it
must soon subside: it may be so with respect to my relations; but not to
Mr. Lovelace, I assure you.</p>
<p>WEDNESDAY NOON, MARCH 29.</p>
<p>We cannot always answer for what we can do: but to convince you, that I
can keep my above resolution, with regard to Mr. Lovelace, angry as my
letter is, and three hours since it was written, I assure you, that I
repent it not; nor will soften it, although I find it is not taken away.
And yet I hardly ever before did any thing in anger, that I did not repent
in half an hour; and question myself in less that that time, whether I was
right or wrong.</p>
<p>In this respite till Tuesday, I have a little time to look about me, as I
may say, and to consider of what I have to do, and can do. And Mr.
Lovelace's insolence will make me go very home with myself. Not that I
think I can conquer my aversion to Mr. Solmes. I am sure I cannot. But, if
I absolutely break with Mr. Lovelace, and give my friends convincing
proofs of it, who knows but they will restore me to their favour, and let
their views in relation to the other man go off by degrees?—Or, at
least, that I may be safe till my cousin Morden arrives: to whom, I think,
I will write; and the rather, as Mr. Lovelace has assured me, that my
friends have written to him to make good their side of the question.</p>
<p>But, with all my courage, I am exceedingly apprehensive about the Tuesday
next, and about what may result from my steadfastness; for steadfast I am
sure I shall be. They are resolved, I am told, to try every means to
induce me to comply with what they are determined upon. And I am resolved
to do all I can to avoid what they would force me to do. A dreadful
contention between parents and child!—Each hoping to leave the other
without excuse, whatever the consequence may be.</p>
<p>What can I do? Advise me, my dear. Something is strangely wrong somewhere!
to make parents, the most indulgent till now, seem cruel in a child's eye;
and a daughter, till within these few weeks, thought unexceptionably
dutiful, appear, in their judgment, a rebel!—Oh! my ambitious and
violent brother! What may he have to answer for to both!</p>
<p>Be pleased to remember, my dear, that your last favour was dated on
Saturday. This is Wednesday: and none of mine have been taken away since.
Don't let me want you advice. My situation is extremely difficult.—But
I am sure you love me still: and not the less on that account. Adieu, my
beloved friend.</p>
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