MRS. VERNON TO MR. DE COURCY
Churchhill.
Well, my dear Reginald, I have seen
this dangerous creature, and must give you some description
of her, though I hope you will soon be able to form
your own judgment she is really excessively pretty;
however you may choose to question the allurements
of a lady no longer young, I must, for my own part,
declare that I have seldom seen so lovely a woman as
Lady Susan. She is delicately fair, with fine
grey eyes and dark eyelashes; and from her appearance
one would not suppose her more than five and twenty,
though she must in fact be ten years older, I was certainly
not disposed to admire her, though always hearing
she was beautiful; but I cannot help feeling that
she possesses an uncommon union of symmetry, brilliancy,
and grace. Her address to me was so gentle, frank,
and even affectionate, that, if I had not known how
much she has always disliked me for marrying Mr. Vernon,
and that we had never met before, I should have imagined
her an attached friend. One is apt, I believe,
to connect assurance of manner with coquetry, and
to expect that an impudent address will naturally attend
an impudent mind; at least I was myself prepared for
an improper degree of confidence in Lady Susan; but
her countenance is absolutely sweet, and her voice
and manner winningly mild. I am sorry it is so,
for what is this but deceit? Unfortunately, one
knows her too well. She is clever and agreeable,
has all that knowledge of the world which makes conversation
easy, and talks very well, with a happy command of
language, which is too often used, I believe, to make
black appear white. She has already almost persuaded
me of her being warmly attached to her daughter, though
I have been so long convinced to the contrary.
She speaks of her with so much tenderness and anxiety,
lamenting so bitterly the neglect of her education,
which she represents however as wholly unavoidable,
that I am forced to recollect how many successive
springs her ladyship spent in town, while her daughter
was left in Staffordshire to the care of servants,
or a governess very little better, to prevent my believing
what she says.
If her manners have so great an influence
on my resentful heart, you may judge how much more
strongly they operate on Mr. Vernon’s generous
temper. I wish I could be as well satisfied as
he is, that it was really her choice to leave Langford
for Churchhill; and if she had not stayed there for
months before she discovered that her friend’s
manner of living did not suit her situation or feelings,
I might have believed that concern for the loss of
such a husband as Mr. Vernon, to whom her own behaviour
was far from unexceptionable, might for a time make
her wish for retirement. But I cannot forget
the length of her visit to the Mainwarings, and when
I reflect on the different mode of life which she
led with them from that to which she must now submit,
I can only suppose that the wish of establishing her
reputation by following though late the path of propriety,
occasioned her removal from a family where she must
in reality have been particularly happy. Your
friend Mr. Smith’s story, however, cannot be
quite correct, as she corresponds regularly with Mrs.
Mainwaring. At any rate it must be exaggerated.
It is scarcely possible that two men should be so grossly
deceived by her at once.
Yours, &c.,
CATHERINE VERNON