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<h2> LETTER XXXII </h2>
<p>MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE, TO MISS HOWE TUESDAY NIGHT, MAY 16.</p>
<p>Mr. Lovelace has sent me, by Dorcas, his proposals, as follow:</p>
<p>'To spare a delicacy so extreme, and to obey you, I write: and the rather
that you may communicate this paper to Miss Howe, who may consult any of
her friends you shall think proper to have intrusted on this occasion. I
say intrusted; because, as you know, I have given it out to several
persons, that we are actually married.</p>
<p>'In the first place, Madam, I offer to settle upon you, by way of
jointure, your whole estate: and moreover to vest in trustees such a part
of mine in Lancashire, as shall produce a clear four hundred pounds a
year, to be paid to your sole and separate use quarterly.</p>
<p>'My own estate is a clear not nominnal 2000l. per annum. Lord M. proposes
to give me possession either of that which he has in Lancashire, [to
which, by the way, I think I have a better title than he has himself,] or
that we call The Lawn, in Hertfordshire, upon my nuptials with a lady whom
he so greatly admires; and to make that I shall choose a clear 1000l. per
annum.</p>
<p>'My too great contempt of censure has subjected me to much slander. It may
not therefore be improper to assure you, on the word of a gentleman, that
no part of my estate was ever mortgaged: and that although I lived very
expensively abroad, and made large draughts, yet that Midsummer-day next
will discharge all that I owe in the world. My notions are not all bad
ones. I have been thought, in pecuniary cases, generous. It would have
deserved another name, had I not first been just.</p>
<p>'If, as your own estate is at present in your father's hands, you rather
choose that I should make a jointure out of mine, tantamount to yours, be
it what it will, it shall be done. I will engage Lord M. to write to you,
what he proposes to do on the happy occasion: not as your desire or
expectation, but to demonstrate, that no advantage is intended to be taken
of the situation you are in with your own family.</p>
<p>'To shew the beloved daughter the consideration I have for her, I will
consent that she shall prescribe the terms of agreement in relation to the
large sums, which must be in her father's hands, arising from her
grandfather's estate. I have no doubt, but he will be put upon making
large demands upon you. All those it shall be in your power to comply
with, for the sake of your own peace. And the remainder shall be paid into
your hands, and be entirely at your disposal, as a fund to support those
charitable donations, which I have heard you so famed for out of your
family, and for which you have been so greatly reflected upon in it.</p>
<p>'As to clothes, jewels, and the like, against the time you shall choose to
make your appearance, it will be my pride that you shall not be beholden
for such of these, as shall be answerable to the rank of both, to those
who have had the stupid folly to renounce a daughter they deserved not.
You must excuse me, Madam: you would mistrust my sincerity in the rest,
could I speak of these people without asperity, though so nearly related
to you.</p>
<p>'These, Madam, are my proposals. They are such as I always designed to
make, whenever you would permit me to enter into the delightful subject.
But you have been so determined to try every method for reconciling
yourself to your relations, even by giving me absolutely up for ever, that
you seemed to think it but justice to keep me at a distance, till the
event of that your predominant hope could be seen. It is now seen! —and
although I have been, and perhaps still am, ready to regret the want of
that preference I wished for from you as Miss Clarissa Harlowe, yet I am
sure, as the husband of Mrs. Lovelace, I shall be more ready to adore than
to blame you for the pangs you have given to a heart, the generosity, or
rather, the justice of which, my implacable enemies have taught you to
doubt: and this still the readier, as I am persuaded that those pangs
never would have been given by a mind so noble, had not the doubt been
entertained (perhaps with too great an appearance of reason); and as I
hope I shall have it to reflect, that the moment the doubt shall be
overcome, the indifference will cease.</p>
<p>'I will only add, that if I have omitted any thing, that would have given
you farther satisfaction; or if the above terms be short of what you would
wish; you will be pleased to supply them as you think fit. And when I know
your pleasure, I will instantly order articles to be drawn up comformably,
that nothing in my power may be wanting to make you happy.</p>
<p>'You will now, dearest Madam, judge, how far all the rest depends upon
yourself.'</p>
<p>You see, my dear, what he offers. You see it is all my fault, that he has
not made these offers before. I am a strange creature!—to be to
blame in every thing, and to every body; yet neither intend the ill at the
time, nor know it to be the ill too late, or so nearly too late, that I
must give up all the delicacy he talks of, to compound for my fault!</p>
<p>I shall now judge how far the rest depends upon myself! So coldly
concludes he such warm, and, in the main, unobjectionably proposals: Would
you not, as you read, have supposed, that the paper would conclude with
the most earnest demand of a day?—I own, I had that expectation so
strong, resulting naturally, as I may say, from the premises, that without
studying for dissatisfaction, I could not help being dissatisfied when I
came to the conclusion.</p>
<p>But you say there is no help. I must perhaps make further sacrifices. All
delicacy it seems is to be at an end with me!—but, if so, this man
knows not what every wise man knows, that prudence, and virtue, and
delicacy of mind in a wife, do the husband more real honour in the eye of
the world, than the same qualities (were she destitute of them) in
himself, do him: as the want of them in her does him more dishonour: For
are not the wife's errors the husband's reproach? how justly his reproach,
is another thing.</p>
<p>I will consider this paper; and write to it, if I am able: for it seems
now, all the rest depends upon myself.</p>
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