Clarissa Harlowe; or the history of a young lady — Volume 7 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 381 pages of information about Clarissa Harlowe; or the history of a young lady — Volume 7.

Clarissa Harlowe; or the history of a young lady — Volume 7 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 381 pages of information about Clarissa Harlowe; or the history of a young lady — Volume 7.

Hickman, [I have a mortal aversion to that fellow!] has, by a line which I have just now received, requested an interview with me on Friday at Mr. Dormer’s, as at a common friend’s.  Does the business he wants to meet me upon require that it should be at a common friend’s?—­A challenge implied:  Is it not, Belford?—­I shall not be civil to him, I doubt.  He has been an intermeddler?—­Then I envy him on Miss Howe’s account:  for if I have a right notion of this Hickman, it is impossible that that virago can ever love him.

Every one knows that the mother, (saucy as the daughter sometimes is,) crams him down her throat.  Her mother is one of the most violent-spirited women in England.  Her late husband could not stand in the matrimonial contention of Who should? but tipt off the perch in it, neither knowing how to yield, nor knowing how to conquer.

A charming encouragement for a man of intrigue, when he has reason to believe that the woman he has a view upon has no love for her husband!  What good principles must that wife have, who is kept in against temptation by a sense of her duty, and plighted faith, where affection has no hold of her!

Pr’ythee let’s know, very particularly, how it fares with poor Belton.  ’Tis an honest fellow.  Something more than his Thomasine seems to stick with him.

Thou hast not been preaching to him conscience and reformation, hast thou?—­Thou shouldest not take liberties with him of this sort, unless thou thoughtest him absolutely irrecoverable.  A man in ill health, and crop-sick, cannot play with these solemn things as thou canst, and be neither better nor worse for them.—­Repentance, Jack, I have a notion, should be set about while a man is in health and spirits.  What’s a man fit for, [not to begin a new work, surely!] when he is not himself, nor master of his faculties?—­Hence, as I apprehend, it is that a death-bed repentance is supposed to be such a precarious and ineffectual thing.

As to myself, I hope I have a great deal of time before me; since I intend one day to be a reformed man.  I have very serious reflections now-and-then.  Yet am I half afraid of the truth of what my charmer once told me, that a man cannot repent when he will.—­Not to hold it, I suppose she meant!  By fits and starts I have repented a thousand times.

Casting my eye over the two preceding paragraphs, I fancy there is something like contradiction in them.  But I will not reconsider them.  The subject is a very serious one.  I don’t at present quite understand it.  But now for one more airy.

Tourville, Mowbray, and myself, pass away our time as pleasantly as possibly we can without thee.  I wish we don’t add to Lord M.’s gouty days by the joy we give him.

This is one advantage, as I believe I have elsewhere observed, that we male-delinquents in love-matters have of the other sex:—­for while they, poor things! sit sighing in holes and corners, or run to woods and groves to bemoan themselves on their baffled hopes, we can rant and roar, hunt and hawk; and, by new loves, banish from our hearts all remembrance of the old ones.

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Clarissa Harlowe; or the history of a young lady — Volume 7 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.