FROM THE SAME TO THE SAME
Churchhill.
Little did I imagine, my dear Mother,
when I sent off my last letter, that the delightful
perturbation of spirits I was then in would undergo
so speedy, so melancholy a reverse. I never can
sufficiently regret that I wrote to you at all.
Yet who could have foreseen what has happened?
My dear mother, every hope which made me so happy
only two hours ago has vanished. The quarrel
between Lady Susan and Reginald is made up, and we
are all as we were before. One point only is
gained. Sir James Martin is dismissed. What
are we now to look forward to? I am indeed disappointed;
Reginald was all but gone, his horse was ordered and
all but brought to the door; who would not have felt
safe? For half an hour I was in momentary expectation
of his departure. After I had sent off my letter
to you, I went to Mr. Vernon, and sat with him in
his room talking over the whole matter, and then determined
to look for Frederica, whom I had not seen since breakfast.
I met her on the stairs, and saw that she was crying.
“My dear aunt,” said she, “he is
going—Mr. De Courcy is going, and it is
all my fault. I am afraid you will be very angry
with me. but indeed I had no idea it would end so.”
“My love,” I replied, “do not think
it necessary to apologize to me on that account.
I shall feel myself under an obligation to anyone who
is the means of sending my brother home, because,”
recollecting myself, “I know my father wants
very much to see him. But what is it you have
done to occasion all this?” She blushed deeply
as she answered: “I was so unhappy about
Sir James that I could not help—I have done
something very wrong, I know; but you have not an
idea of the misery I have been in: and mamma had
ordered me never to speak to you or my uncle about
it, and—” “You therefore spoke
to my brother to engage his interference,” said
I, to save her the explanation. “No, but
I wrote to him—I did indeed, I got up this
morning before it was light, and was two hours about
it; and when my letter was done I thought I never
should have courage to give it. After breakfast
however, as I was going to my room, I met him in the
passage, and then, as I knew that everything must
depend on that moment, I forced myself to give it.
He was so good as to take it immediately. I dared
not look at him, and ran away directly. I was
in such a fright I could hardly breathe. My dear
aunt, you do not know how miserable I have been.”
“Frederica” said I, “you ought to
have told me all your distresses. You would have
found in me a friend always ready to assist you.
Do you think that your uncle or I should not have
espoused your cause as warmly as my brother?”
“Indeed, I did not doubt your kindness,”
said she, colouring again, “but I thought Mr.
De Courcy could do anything with my mother; but I was
mistaken: they have had a dreadful quarrel about
it, and he is going away. Mamma will never forgive
me, and I shall be worse off than ever.”
“No, you shall not,” I replied; “in
such a point as this your mother’s prohibition
ought not to have prevented your speaking to me on
the subject. She has no right to make you unhappy,
and she shall not do it. Your applying, however,
to Reginald can be productive only of good to all
parties. I believe it is best as it is.
Depend upon it that you shall not be made unhappy any
longer.” At that moment how great was my
astonishment at seeing Reginald come out of Lady Susan’s
dressing-room. My heart misgave me instantly.
His confusion at seeing me was very evident.
Frederica immediately disappeared. “Are
you going?” I said; “you will find Mr.
Vernon in his own room.” “No, Catherine,”
he replied, “I am not going. Will you let
me speak to you a moment?” We went into my room.
“I find,” he continued, his confusion
increasing as he spoke, “that I have been acting
with my usual foolish impetuosity. I have entirely
misunderstood Lady Susan, and was on the point of
leaving the house under a false impression of her conduct.
There has been some very great mistake; we have been
all mistaken, I fancy. Frederica does not know
her mother. Lady Susan means nothing but her good,
but she will not make a friend of her. Lady Susan
does not always know, therefore, what will make her
daughter happy. Besides, I could have no right
to interfere. Miss Vernon was mistaken in applying
to me. In short, Catherine, everything has gone
wrong, but it is now all happily settled. Lady
Susan, I believe, wishes to speak to you about it,
if you are at leisure.” “Certainly,”
I replied, deeply sighing at the recital of so lame
a story. I made no comments, however, for words
would have been vain.
Reginald was glad to get away, and
I went to Lady Susan, curious, indeed, to hear her
account of it. “Did I not tell you,”
said she with a smile, “that your brother would
not leave us after all?” “You did, indeed,”
replied I very gravely; “but I flattered myself
you would be mistaken.” “I should
not have hazarded such an opinion,” returned
she, “if it had not at that moment occurred
to me that his resolution of going might be occasioned
by a conversation in which we had been this morning
engaged, and which had ended very much to his dissatisfaction,
from our not rightly understanding each other’s
meaning. This idea struck me at the moment, and
I instantly determined that an accidental dispute,
in which I might probably be as much to blame as himself,
should not deprive you of your brother. If you
remember, I left the room almost immediately.
I was resolved to lose no time in clearing up those
mistakes as far as I could. The case was this—Frederica
had set herself violently against marrying Sir James.”
“And can your ladyship wonder that she should?”
cried I with some warmth; “Frederica has an
excellent understanding, and Sir James has none.”
“I am at least very far from regretting it, my
dear sister,” said she; “on the contrary,
I am grateful for so favourable a sign of my daughter’s
sense. Sir James is certainly below par (his boyish
manners make him appear worse); and had Frederica
possessed the penetration and the abilities which
I could have wished in my daughter, or had I even known
her to possess as much as she does, I should not have
been anxious for the match.” “It is
odd that you should alone be ignorant of your daughter’s
sense!” “Frederica never does justice
to herself; her manners are shy and childish, and
besides she is afraid of me. During her poor father’s
life she was a spoilt child; the severity which it
has since been necessary for me to show has alienated
her affection; neither has she any of that brilliancy
of intellect, that genius or vigour of mind which
will force itself forward.” “Say
rather that she has been unfortunate in her education!”
“Heaven knows, my dearest Mrs. Vernon, how fully
I am aware of that; but I would wish to forget every
circumstance that might throw blame on the memory of
one whose name is sacred with me.” Here
she pretended to cry; I was out of patience with her.
“But what,” said I, “was your ladyship
going to tell me about your disagreement with my brother?”
“It originated in an action of my daughter’s,
which equally marks her want of judgment and the unfortunate
dread of me I have been mentioning—she wrote
to Mr. De Courcy.” “I know she did;
you had forbidden her speaking to Mr. Vernon or to
me on the cause of her distress; what could she do,
therefore, but apply to my brother?” “Good
God!” she exclaimed, “what an opinion you
must have of me! Can you possibly suppose that
I was aware of her unhappiness! that it was my object
to make my own child miserable, and that I had forbidden
her speaking to you on the subject from a fear of
your interrupting the diabolical scheme? Do you
think me destitute of every honest, every natural feeling?
Am I capable of consigning her to everlasting:
misery whose welfare it is my first earthly duty to
promote? The idea is horrible!” “What,
then, was your intention when you insisted on her
silence?” “Of what use, my dear sister,
could be any application to you, however the affair
might stand? Why should I subject you to entreaties
which I refused to attend to myself? Neither
for your sake nor for hers, nor for my own, could such
a thing be desirable. When my own resolution
was taken I could nor wish for the interference, however
friendly, of another person. I was mistaken, it
is true, but I believed myself right.”
“But what was this mistake to which your ladyship
so often alludes! from whence arose so astonishing
a misconception of your daughter’s feelings!
Did you not know that she disliked Sir James?”
“I knew that he was not absolutely the man she
would have chosen, but I was persuaded that her objections
to him did not arise from any perception of his deficiency.
You must not question me, however, my dear sister,
too minutely on this point,” continued she, taking
me affectionately by the hand; “I honestly own
that there is something to conceal. Frederica
makes me very unhappy! Her applying to Mr. De
Courcy hurt me particularly.” “What
is it you mean to infer,” said I, “by this
appearance of mystery? If you think your daughter
at all attached to Reginald, her objecting to Sir
James could not less deserve to be attended to than
if the cause of her objecting had been a consciousness
of his folly; and why should your ladyship, at any
rate, quarrel with my brother for an interference
which, you must know, it is not in his nature to refuse
when urged in such a manner?”
“His disposition, you know,
is warm, and he came to expostulate with me; his compassion
all alive for this ill-used girl, this heroine in distress!
We misunderstood each other: he believed me more
to blame than I really was; I considered his interference
less excusable than I now find it. I have a real
regard for him, and was beyond expression mortified
to find it, as I thought, so ill bestowed We were
both warm, and of course both to blame. His resolution
of leaving Churchhill is consistent with his general
eagerness. When I understood his intention, however,
and at the same time began to think that we had been
perhaps equally mistaken in each other’s meaning,
I resolved to have an explanation before it was too
late. For any member of your family I must always
feel a degree of affection, and I own it would have
sensibly hurt me if my acquaintance with Mr. De Courcy
had ended so gloomily. I have now only to say
further, that as I am convinced of Frederica’s
having a reasonable dislike to Sir James, I shall instantly
inform him that he must give up all hope of her.
I reproach myself for having even, though innocently,
made her unhappy on that score. She shall have
all the retribution in my power to make; if she value
her own happiness as much as I do, if she judge wisely,
and command herself as she ought, she may now be easy.
Excuse me, my dearest sister, for thus trespassing
on your time, but I owe it to my own character; and
after this explanation I trust I am in no danger of
sinking in your opinion.” I could have
said, “Not much, indeed!” but I left her
almost in silence. It was the greatest stretch
of forbearance I could practise. I could not have
stopped myself had I begun. Her assurance! her
deceit! but I will not allow myself to dwell on them;
they will strike you sufficiently. My heart sickens
within me. As soon as I was tolerably composed
I returned to the parlour. Sir James’s
carriage was at the door, and he, merry as usual, soon
afterwards took his leave. How easily does her
ladyship encourage or dismiss a lover! In spite
of this release, Frederica still looks unhappy:
still fearful, perhaps, of her mother’s anger;
and though dreading my brother’s departure,
jealous, it may be, of his staying. I see how
closely she observes him and Lady Susan, poor girl!
I have now no hope for her. There is not a chance
of her affection being returned. He thinks very
differently of her from what he used to do; he does
her some justice, but his reconciliation with her
mother precludes every dearer hope. Prepare, my
dear mother, for the worst! The probability of
their marrying is surely heightened! He is more
securely hers than ever. When that wretched event
takes place, Frederica must belong wholly to us.
I am thankful that my last letter will precede this
by so little, as every moment that you can be saved
from feeling a joy which leads only to disappointment
is of consequence.
Yours ever, &c.,
Catherine Vernon.