FROM THE SAME TO THE SAME
Churchhill.
My dear Mother,—I am very
glad to find that my description of Frederica Vernon
has interested you, for I do believe her truly deserving
of your regard; and when I have communicated a notion
which has recently struck me, your kind impressions
in her favour will, I am sure, be heightened.
I cannot help fancying that she is growing partial
to my brother. I so very often see her eyes fixed
on his face with a remarkable expression of pensive
admiration. He is certainly very handsome; and
yet more, there is an openness in his manner that
must be highly prepossessing, and I am sure she feels
it so. Thoughtful and pensive in general, her
countenance always brightens into a smile when Reginald
says anything amusing; and, let the subject be ever
so serious that he may be conversing on, I am much
mistaken if a syllable of his uttering escapes her.
I want to make him sensible of all this, for we know
the power of gratitude on such a heart as his; and
could Frederica’s artless affection detach him
from her mother, we might bless the day which brought
her to Churchhill. I think, my dear mother, you
would not disapprove of her as a daughter. She
is extremely young, to be sure, has had a wretched
education, and a dreadful example of levity in her
mother; but yet I can pronounce her disposition to
be excellent, and her natural abilities very good.
Though totally without accomplishments, she is by
no means so ignorant as one might expect to find her,
being fond of books and spending the chief of her
time in reading. Her mother leaves her more to
herself than she did, and I have her with me as much
as possible, and have taken great pains to overcome
her timidity. We are very good friends, and though
she never opens her lips before her mother, she talks
enough when alone with me to make it clear that, if
properly treated by Lady Susan, she would always appear
to much greater advantage. There cannot be a
more gentle, affectionate heart; or more obliging manners,
when acting without restraint; and her little cousins
are all very fond of her.
Your affectionate daughter,
C. VERNON
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