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<h2> LETTER XXV </h2>
<h3> MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE, TO MISS HOWE FRIDAY, MARCH 31. </h3>
<p>You have very kindly accounted for your silence. People in misfortune are
always in doubt. They are too apt to turn even unavoidable accidents into
slights and neglects; especially in those whose favourable opinion they
wish to preserve.</p>
<p>I am sure I ought evermore to exempt my Anna Howe from the supposed
possibility of her becoming one of those who bask only in the sun-shine of
a friend: but nevertheless her friendship is too precious to me, not to
doubt my own merits on the one hand, and not to be anxious for the
preservation of it, on the other.</p>
<p>You so generously gave me liberty to chide you, that I am afraid of taking
it, because I could sooner mistrust my own judgment, than that of a
beloved friend, whose ingenuousness in acknowledging an imputed error
seems to set her above the commission of a wilful one. This makes me
half-afraid to ask you, if you think you are not too cruel, too ungenerous
shall I say? in your behaviour to a man who loves you so dearly, and is so
worthy and so sincere a man?</p>
<p>Only it is by YOU, or I should be ashamed to be outdone in that true
magnanimity, which makes one thankful for the wounds given by a true
friend. I believe I was guilty of a petulance, which nothing but my uneasy
situation can excuse; if that can. I am but almost afraid to beg of you,
and yet I repeatedly do, to give way to that charming spirit, whenever it
rises to your pen, which smiles, yet goes to the quick of my fault. What
patient shall be afraid of a probe in so delicate a hand?—I say, I
am almost afraid to pray you to give way to it, for fear you should, for
that very reason, restrain it. For the edge may be taken off, if it does
not make the subject of its raillery wince a little. Permitted or desired
satire may be apt, in a generous satirist, mending as it rallies, to turn
too soon into panegyric. Yours is intended to instruct; and though it
bites, it pleases at the same time: no fear of a wound's wrankling or
festering by so delicate a point as you carry; not envenomed by
personality, not intending to expose, or ridicule, or exasperate. The most
admired of our moderns know nothing of this art: Why? Because it must be
founded in good nature, and directed by a right heart. The man, not the
fault, is generally the subject of their satire: and were it to be just,
how should it be useful; how should it answer any good purpose; when every
gash (for their weapon is a broad sword, not a lancet) lets in the air of
public ridicule, and exasperates where it should heal? Spare me not
therefore because I am your friend. For that very reason spare me not. I
may feel your edge, fine as it is. I may be pained: you would lose you end
if I were not: but after the first sensibility (as I have said more than
once before) I will love you the better, and my amended heart shall be all
yours; and it will then be more worthy to be yours.</p>
<p>You have taught me what to say to, and what to think of, Mr. Lovelace. You
have, by agreeable anticipation, let me know how it is probable he will
apply to me to be excused. I will lay every thing before you that shall
pass on the occasion, if he do apply, that I may take your advice, when it
can come in time; and when it cannot, that I may receive your correction,
or approbation, as I may happen to merit either.—Only one thing must
be allowed for me; that whatever course I shall be permitted or be forced
to steer, I must be considered as a person out of her own direction. Tost
to and fro by the high winds of passionate controul, (and, as I think,
unseasonable severity,) I behold the desired port, the single state, into
which I would fain steer; but am kept off by the foaming billows of a
brother's and sister's envy, and by the raging winds of a supposed invaded
authority; while I see in Lovelace, the rocks on one hand, and in Solmes,
the sands on the other; and tremble, lest I should split upon the former,
or strike upon the latter.</p>
<p>But you, my better pilot, to what a charming hope do you bid me aspire, if
things come to extremity!—I will not, as you caution me, too much
depend upon your success with your mother in my favour; for well I know
her high notions of implicit duty in a child: but yet I will hope too;
because her seasonable protection may save me perhaps from a greater
rashness: and in this case, she shall direct me in all my ways: I will do
nothing but by her orders, and by her advice and yours: not see any body:
not write to any body: nor shall any living soul, but by her direction and
yours, know where I am. In any cottage place me, I will never stir out,
unless, disguised as your servant, I am now-and-then permitted an
evening-walk with you: and this private protection to be granted for no
longer time than till my cousin Morden comes; which, as I hope, cannot be
long.</p>
<p>I am afraid I must not venture to take the hint you give me, to deposit
some of my clothes; although I will some of my linen, as well as papers.</p>
<p>I will tell you why—Betty had for some time been very curious about
my wardrobe, whenever I took out any of my things before her.</p>
<p>Observing this, I once, on taking one of my garden-airings, left my keys
in the locks: and on my return surprised the creature with her hand upon
the keys, as if shutting the door.</p>
<p>She was confounded at my sudden coming back. I took no notice: but on her
retiring, I found my cloaths were not in the usual order.</p>
<p>I doubted not, upon this, that her curiosity was owing to the orders she
had received; and being afraid they would abridge me of my airings, if
their suspicions were not obviated, it has ever since been my custom
(among other contrivances) not only to leave my keys in the locks, but to
employ the wench now-and-then in taking out my cloaths, suit by suit, on
pretence of preventing their being rumpled or creased, and to see that the
flowered silver suit did not tarnish: sometimes declaredly to give myself
employment, having little else to do. With which employment (superadded to
the delight taken by the low as well as by the high of our sex in seeing
fine cloaths) she seemed always, I thought, as well pleased as if it
answered one of the offices she had in charge.</p>
<p>To this, and to the confidence they have in a spy so diligent, and to
their knowing that I have not one confidant in a family in which
nevertheless I believe every servant loves me; nor have attempted to make
one; I suppose, I owe the freedom I enjoy of my airings: and perhaps
(finding I make no movements towards going away) they are the more secure,
that I shall at last be prevailed upon to comply with their measures:
since they must think, that, otherwise, they give me provocation enough to
take some rash step, in order to free myself from a treatment so
disgraceful; and which [God forgive me, if I judge amiss!] I am afraid my
brother and sister would not be sorry to drive me to take.</p>
<p>If, therefore, such a step should become necessary, (which I yet hope will
not,) I must be contented to go away with the clothes I shall have on at
the time. My custom to be dressed for the day, as soon as breakfast is
over, when I have had no household employments to prevent me, will make
such a step (if I am forced to take it) less suspected. And the linen I
shall deposit, in pursuance of your kind hint, cannot be missed.</p>
<p>This custom, although a prisoner, (as I may too truly say,) and neither
visited nor visiting, I continue. We owe to ourselves, and to our sex, you
know, to be always neat; and never to be surprised in a way we should be
pained to be seen in.</p>
<p>Besides, people in adversity (which is the state of trial of every good
quality) should endeavour to preserve laudable customs, that, if sun shine
return, they may not be losers by their trial.</p>
<p>Does it not, moreover, manifest a firmness of mind, in an unhappy person,
to keep hope alive? To hope for better days, is half to deserve them: for
could we have just ground for such a hope, if we did not resolve to
deserve what that hope bids us aspire to?—Then who shall befriend a
person who forsakes herself?</p>
<p>These are reflections by which I sometimes endeavour to support myself.</p>
<p>I know you don't despise my grave airs, although (with a view no doubt to
irradiate my mind in my misfortunes) you rally me upon them. Every body
has not your talent of introducing serious and important lessons, in such
a happy manner as at once to delight and instruct.</p>
<p>What a multitude of contrivances may not young people fall upon, if the
mind be not engaged by acts of kindness and condescension! I am not used
by my friends of late as I always used their servants.</p>
<p>When I was intrusted with the family-management, I always found it right,
as well in policy as generosity, to repose a trust in them. Not to seem to
expect or depend upon justice from them, is in a manner to bid them to
take opportunities, whenever they offer, to be unjust.</p>
<p>Mr. Solmes, (to expatiate on this low, but not unuseful subject,) in his
more trifling solicitudes, would have had a sorry key-keeper in me. Were I
mistress of a family, I would not either take to myself, or give to
servants, the pain of keeping those I had reason to suspect. People low in
station have often minds not sordid. Nay, I have sometimes thought, that
(even take number for number) there are more honest low people, than
honest high. In the one, honest is their chief pride. In the other, the
love of power, of grandeur, of pleasure, mislead; and that and their
ambition induce a paramount pride, which too often swallows up the more
laudable one.</p>
<p>Many of the former would scorn to deceive a confidence. But I have seen,
among the most ignorant of their class, a susceptibility of resentment, if
their honesty has been suspected: and have more than once been forced to
put a servant right, whom I have heard say, that, although she valued
herself upon her honesty, no master or mistress should suspect her for
nothing.</p>
<p>How far has the comparison I had in my head, between my friends treatment
of me, and my treatment of the servants, carried me!—But we always
allowed ourselves to expatiate on such subjects, whether low or high, as
might tend to enlarge our minds, or mend our management, whether notional
or practical, and whether such expatiating respected our present, or might
respect our probable future situations.</p>
<p>What I was principally leading to, was to tell you how ingenious I am in
my contrivances and pretences to blind my gaoleress, and to take off the
jealousy of her principals on my going down so often into the garden and
poultry-yard. People suspiciously treated are never I believe at a loss
for invention. Sometimes I want air, and am better the moment I am out of
my chamber.—Sometimes spirits; and then my bantams and pheasants or
the cascade divert me; the former, by their inspiring liveliness; the
latter, by its echoing dashes, and hollow murmurs.—Sometimes,
solitude is of all things my wish; and the awful silence of the night, the
spangled element, and the rising and setting sun, how promotive of
contemplation!—Sometimes, when I intend nothing, and expect no
letters, I am officious to take Betty with me; and at others, bespeak her
attendance, when I know she is otherwise employed, and cannot give it me.</p>
<p>These more capital artifices I branch out into lesser ones, without
number. Yet all have not only the face of truth, but are real truths;
although not my principal motive. How prompt a thing is will!—What
impediments does dislike furnish!—How swiftly, through every
difficulty, do we move with the one!—how tardily with the other!—every
trifling obstruction weighing us down, as if lead were fastened to our
feet!</p>
<p>FRIDAY MORNING, ELEVEN O'CLOCK.</p>
<p>I have already made up my parcel of linen. My heart ached all the time I
was employed about it; and still aches, at the thoughts of its being a
necessary precaution.</p>
<p>When the parcel comes to your hands, as I hope it safely will, you will be
pleased to open it. You will find in it two parcels sealed up; one of
which contains the letters you have not yet seen; being those written
since I left you: in the other are all the letters and copies of letters
that have passed between you and me since I was last with you; with some
other papers on subjects so much above me, that I cannot wish them to be
seen by any body whose indulgence I am not so sure of, as I am of yours.
If my judgment ripen with my years, perhaps I may review them.</p>
<p>Mrs. Norton used to say, from her reverend father, that youth was the time
of life for imagination and fancy to work in: then, were a writer to lay
by his works till riper years and experience should direct the fire rather
to glow, than to flame out; something between both might perhaps be
produced that would not displease a judicious eye.</p>
<p>In a third division, folded up separately, are all Mr. Lovelace's letters
written to me since he was forbidden this house, and copies of my answers
to them. I expect that you will break the seals of this parcel, and when
you have perused them all, give me your free opinion of my conduct.</p>
<p>By the way, not a line from that man!—Not one line! Wednesday I
deposited mine. It remained there on Wednesday night. What time it was
taken away yesterday I cannot tell: for I did not concern myself about it,
till towards night; and then it was not there. No return at ten this day.
I suppose he is as much out of humour as I.—With all my heart.</p>
<p>He may be mean enough perhaps, if ever I should put it into his power, to
avenge himself for the trouble he has had with me.—But that now, I
dare say, I never shall.</p>
<p>I see what sort of a man the encroacher is. And I hope we are equally sick
of one another.—My heart is vexedly easy, if I may so describe it.—Vexedly—because
of the apprehended interview with Solmes, and the consequences it may be
attended with: or else I should be quite easy; for why? I have not
deserved the usage I receive: and could I be rid of Solmes, as I presume I
am of Lovelace, their influence over my father, mother, and uncles,
against me, could not hold.</p>
<p>The five guineas tied up in one corner of a handkerchief under the linen,
I beg you will let pass as an acknowledgement for the trouble I give your
trusty servant. You must not chide me for this. You know I cannot be easy
unless I have my way in these little matters.</p>
<p>I was going to put up what little money I have, and some of my ornaments;
but they are portable, and I cannot forget them. Besides, should they
(suspecting me) desire to see any of the jewels, and were I not able to
produce them, it would amount to a demonstration of an intention which
would have a guilty appearance to them.</p>
<p>FRIDAY, ONE O'CLOCK, IN THE WOOD-HOUSE.</p>
<p>No letter yet from this man! I have luckily deposited my parcel, and have
your letter of last night. If Robert take this without the parcel, pray
let him return immediately for it. But he cannot miss it, I think: and
must conclude that it is put there for him to take away. You may believe,
from the contents of yours, that I shall immediately write again.—</p>
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