Elinor, starting back with a look
of horror at the sight of him, obeyed the first impulse
of her heart in turning instantly to quit the room,
and her hand was already on the lock, when its action
was suspended by his hastily advancing, and saying,
in a voice rather of command than supplication,
“Miss Dashwood, for half an
hour—for ten minutes— I entreat
you to stay.”
“No, sir,” she replied
with firmness, “I shall not stay.
Your business cannot be with me. The servants,
I suppose, forgot to tell you that Mr. Palmer was
not in the house.”
“Had they told me,” he
cried with vehemence, “that Mr. Palmer and all
his relations were at the devil, it would not have
turned me from the door. My business is with
you, and only you.”
“With me!”—in
the utmost amazement—“well, sir,—
be quick—and if you can—less
violent.”
“Sit down, and I will be both.”
She hesitated; she knew not what to
do. The possibility of Colonel Brandon’s
arriving and finding her there, came across her.
But she had promised to hear him, and her curiosity
no less than her honor was engaged. After a moment’s
recollection, therefore, concluding that prudence
required dispatch, and that her acquiescence would
best promote it, she walked silently towards the table,
and sat down. He took the opposite chair, and
for half a minute not a word was said by either.
“Pray be quick, sir,”—said
Elinor, impatiently;— “I have no
time to spare.”
He was sitting in an attitude of deep
meditation, and seemed not to hear her.
“Your sister,” said he,
with abruptness, a moment afterwards—“is
out of danger. I heard it from the servant.
God be praised!—But is it true? is it really
true?”
Elinor would not speak. He repeated
the inquiry with yet greater eagerness.
“For God’s sake tell me,
is she out of danger, or is she not?”
“We hope she is.”
He rose up, and walked across the room.
“Had I known as much half an
hour ago—But since I am here,”—speaking
with a forced vivacity as he returned to his seat—“what
does it signify?—For once, Miss Dashwood—it
will be the last time, perhaps—let us be
cheerful together.—I am in a fine mood for
gaiety.— Tell me honestly”—a
deeper glow overspreading his cheeks— “do
you think me most a knave or a fool?”
Elinor looked at him with greater
astonishment than ever. She began to think that
he must be in liquor;—the strangeness of
such a visit, and of such manners, seemed no otherwise
intelligible; and with this impression she immediately
rose, saying,
“Mr. Willoughby, I advise you
at present to return to Combe—I am not
at leisure to remain with you longer.—
Whatever your business may be with me, will it be better
recollected and explained to-morrow.”
“I understand you,” he
replied, with an expressive smile, and a voice perfectly
calm; “yes, I am very drunk.— A pint
of porter with my cold beef at Marlborough was enough
to over-set me.”
“At Marlborough!”—cried
Elinor, more and more at a loss to understand what
he would be at.
“Yes,—I left London
this morning at eight o’clock, and the only
ten minutes I have spent out of my chaise since that
time procured me a nuncheon at Marlborough.”
The steadiness of his manner, and
the intelligence of his eye as he spoke, convincing
Elinor, that whatever other unpardonable folly might
bring him to Cleveland, he was not brought there by
intoxication, she said, after a moment’s recollection,
“Mr. Willoughby, you ought
to feel, and I certainly do—that after
what has passed—your coming here in this
manner, and forcing yourself upon my notice, requires
a very particular excuse.—What is it, that
you mean by it?”—
“I mean,”—said
he, with serious energy—“if I can,
to make you hate me one degree less than you do now.
I mean to offer some kind of explanation, some kind
of apology, for the past; to open my whole heart to
you, and by convincing you, that though I have been
always a blockhead, I have not been always a rascal,
to obtain something like forgiveness from Ma—from
your sister.”
“Is this the real reason of your coming?”
“Upon my soul it is,”—was
his answer, with a warmth which brought all the former
Willoughby to her remembrance, and in spite of herself
made her think him sincere.
“If that is all, you may be
satisfied already,— for Marianne does—she
has long forgiven you.”
“Has she?”—he
cried, in the same eager tone.— “Then
she has forgiven me before she ought to have done it.
But she shall forgive me again, and on more reasonable
grounds.—Now will you listen to me?”
Elinor bowed her assent.
“I do not know,” said
he, after a pause of expectation on her side, and
thoughtfulness on his own,—“how you
may have accounted for my behaviour to your sister,
or what diabolical motive you may have imputed to me.—
Perhaps you will hardly think the better of me,—it
is worth the trial however, and you shall hear every
thing. When I first became intimate in your family,
I had no other intention, no other view in the acquaintance
than to pass my time pleasantly while I was obliged
to remain in Devonshire, more pleasantly than I had
ever done before. Your sister’s lovely
person and interesting manners could not but please
me; and her behaviour to me almost from the first,
was of a kind—It is astonishing, when I
reflect on what it was, and what she was, that
my heart should have been so insensible! But
at first I must confess, my vanity only was elevated
by it. Careless of her happiness, thinking only
of my own amusement, giving way to feelings which
I had always been too much in the habit of indulging,
I endeavoured, by every means in my power, to make
myself pleasing to her, without any design of returning
her affection.”
Miss Dashwood, at this point, turning
her eyes on him with the most angry contempt, stopped
him, by saying,
“It is hardly worth while, Mr.
Willoughby, for you to relate, or for me to listen
any longer. Such a beginning as this cannot be
followed by any thing.— Do not let me be
pained by hearing any thing more on the subject.”
“I insist on you hearing the
whole of it,” he replied, “My fortune
was never large, and I had always been expensive,
always in the habit of associating with people of better
income than myself. Every year since my coming
of age, or even before, I believe, had added to my
debts; and though the death of my old cousin, Mrs.
Smith, was to set me free; yet that event being uncertain,
and possibly far distant, it had been for some time
my intention to re-establish my circumstances by marrying
a woman of fortune. To attach myself to your
sister, therefore, was not a thing to be thought of;—and
with a meanness, selfishness, cruelty—
which no indignant, no contemptuous look, even of yours,
Miss Dashwood, can ever reprobate too much—I
was acting in this manner, trying to engage her regard,
without a thought of returning it.—But
one thing may be said for me: even in that horrid
state of selfish vanity, I did not know the extent
of the injury I meditated, because I did not then
know what it was to love. But have I ever known
it?—Well may it be doubted; for, had I
really loved, could I have sacrificed my feelings to
vanity, to avarice?—or, what is more, could
I have sacrificed hers?— But I have done
it. To avoid a comparative poverty, which her
affection and her society would have deprived of all
its horrors, I have, by raising myself to affluence,
lost every thing that could make it a blessing.”
“You did then,” said Elinor,
a little softened, “believe yourself at one
time attached to her?”
“To have resisted such attractions,
to have withstood such tenderness!—Is there
a man on earth who could have done it?—Yes,
I found myself, by insensible degrees, sincerely fond
of her; and the happiest hours of my life were what
I spent with her when I felt my intentions were strictly
honourable, and my feelings blameless. Even then,
however, when fully determined on paying my addresses
to her, I allowed myself most improperly to put off,
from day to day, the moment of doing it, from an unwillingness
to enter into an engagement while my circumstances
were so greatly embarrassed. I will not reason
here—nor will I stop for you to expatiate
on the absurdity, and the worse than absurdity, of
scrupling to engage my faith where my honour was already
bound. The event has proved, that I was a cunning
fool, providing with great circumspection for a possible
opportunity of making myself contemptible and wretched
for ever. At last, however, my resolution was
taken, and I had determined, as soon as I could engage
her alone, to justify the attentions I had so invariably
paid her, and openly assure her of an affection which
I had already taken such pains to display. But
in the interim—in the interim of the very
few hours that were to pass, before I could have an
opportunity of speaking with her in private—
a circumstance occurred—an unlucky circumstance,
to ruin all my resolution, and with it all my comfort.
A discovery took place,”—here he
hesitated and looked down.—“Mrs. Smith
had somehow or other been informed, I imagine by some
distant relation, whose interest it was to deprive
me of her favour, of an affair, a connection—but
I need not explain myself farther,” he added,
looking at her with an heightened colour and an enquiring
eye—“your particular intimacy—you
have probably heard the whole story long ago.”
“I have,” returned Elinor,
colouring likewise, and hardening her heart anew against
any compassion for him, “I have heard it all.
And how you will explain away any part of your guilt
in that dreadful business, I confess is beyond my
comprehension.”
“Remember,” cried Willoughby,
“from whom you received the account. Could
it be an impartial one? I acknowledge that her
situation and her character ought to have been respected
by me. I do not mean to justify myself, but at
the same time cannot leave you to suppose that I have
nothing to urge—that because she was injured
she was irreproachable, and because I was a libertine,
she must be a saint. If the violence of
her passions, the weakness of her understanding—I
do not mean, however, to defend myself. Her affection
for me deserved better treatment, and I often, with
great self-reproach, recall the tenderness which,
for a very short time, had the power of creating any
return. I wish—I heartily wish it
had never been. But I have injured more than
herself; and I have injured one, whose affection for
me—(may I say it?) was scarcely less warm
than hers; and whose mind—Oh! how infinitely
superior!”—
“Your indifference, however,
towards that unfortunate girl—I must say
it, unpleasant to me as the discussion of such a subject
may well be—your indifference is no apology
for your cruel neglect of her. Do not think yourself
excused by any weakness, any natural defect of understanding
on her side, in the wanton cruelty so evident on yours.
You must have known, that while you were enjoying yourself
in Devonshire pursuing fresh schemes, always gay,
always happy, she was reduced to the extremest indigence.”
“But, upon my soul, I did not
know it,” he warmly replied; “I did not
recollect that I had omitted to give her my direction;
and common sense might have told her how to find it
out.”
“Well, sir, and what said Mrs. Smith?”
“She taxed me with the offence
at once, and my confusion may be guessed. The
purity of her life, the formality of her notions,
her ignorance of the world—every thing
was against me. The matter itself I could not
deny, and vain was every endeavour to soften it.
She was previously disposed, I believe, to doubt
the morality of my conduct in general, and was moreover
discontented with the very little attention, the very
little portion of my time that I had bestowed on her,
in my present visit. In short, it ended in a
total breach. By one measure I might have saved
myself. In the height of her morality, good
woman! she offered to forgive the past, if I would
marry Eliza. That could not be—and
I was formally dismissed from her favour and her house.
The night following this affair—I was
to go the next morning— was spent by me
in deliberating on what my future conduct should be.
The struggle was great—but it ended too
soon. My affection for Marianne, my thorough
conviction of her attachment to me—it was
all insufficient to outweigh that dread of poverty,
or get the better of those false ideas of the necessity
of riches, which I was naturally inclined to feel,
and expensive society had increased. I had reason
to believe myself secure of my present wife, if I
chose to address her, and I persuaded myself to think
that nothing else in common prudence remained for me
to do. A heavy scene however awaited me, before
I could leave Devonshire;—I was engaged
to dine with you on that very day; some apology was
therefore necessary for my breaking this engagement.
But whether I should write this apology, or deliver
it in person, was a point of long debate. To
see Marianne, I felt, would be dreadful, and I even
doubted whether I could see her again, and keep to
my resolution. In that point, however, I undervalued
my own magnanimity, as the event declared; for I went,
I saw her, and saw her miserable, and left her miserable—and
left her hoping never to see her again.”
“Why did you call, Mr. Willoughby?”
said Elinor, reproachfully; “a note would have
answered every purpose.— Why was it necessary
to call?”
“It was necessary to my own
pride. I could not bear to leave the country
in a manner that might lead you, or the rest of the
neighbourhood, to suspect any part of what had really
passed between Mrs. Smith and myself— and
I resolved therefore on calling at the cottage, in
my way to Honiton. The sight of your dear sister,
however, was really dreadful; and, to heighten the
matter, I found her alone. You were all gone
I do not know where. I had left her only the
evening before, so fully, so firmly resolved within
my self on doing right! A few hours were to have
engaged her to me for ever; and I remember how happy,
how gay were my spirits, as I walked from the cottage
to Allenham, satisfied with myself, delighted with
every body! But in this, our last interview
of friendship, I approached her with a sense of guilt
that almost took from me the power of dissembling.
Her sorrow, her disappointment, her deep regret, when
I told her that I was obliged to leave Devonshire
so immediately—I never shall forget it—united
too with such reliance, such confidence in me!—Oh,
God!—what a hard-hearted rascal I was!”
They were both silent for a few moments.
Elinor first spoke.
“Did you tell her that you should soon return?”
“I do not know what I told her,”
he replied, impatiently; “less than was due
to the past, beyond a doubt, and in all likelihood
much more than was justified by the future. I
cannot think of it.—It won’t do.—Then
came your dear mother to torture me farther, with
all her kindness and confidence. Thank Heaven!
it did torture me. I was miserable.
Miss Dashwood, you cannot have an idea of the comfort
it gives me to look back on my own misery. I
owe such a grudge to myself for the stupid, rascally
folly of my own heart, that all my past sufferings
under it are only triumph and exultation to me now.
Well, I went, left all that I loved, and went to
those to whom, at best, I was only indifferent.
My journey to town—travelling with my own
horses, and therefore so tediously—no creature
to speak to—my own reflections so cheerful—when
I looked forward every thing so inviting!—when
I looked back at Barton, the picture so soothing!—oh,
it was a blessed journey!”
He stopped.
“Well, sir,” said Elinor,
who, though pitying him, grew impatient for his departure,
“and this is all?”
“Ah!—no,—have
you forgot what passed in town?— That infamous
letter—Did she shew it you?”
“Yes, I saw every note that passed.”
“When the first of hers reached
me (as it immediately did, for I was in town the whole
time,) what I felt is— in the common phrase,
not to be expressed; in a more simple one—perhaps
too simple to raise any emotion— my feelings
were very, very painful.—Every line, every
word was—in the hackneyed metaphor which
their dear writer, were she here, would forbid—a
dagger to my heart. To know that Marianne was
in town was—in the same language—
a thunderbolt.—Thunderbolts and daggers!—what
a reproof would she have given me!—her
taste, her opinions—I believe they are
better known to me than my own,—and I am
sure they are dearer.”
Elinor’s heart, which had undergone
many changes in the course of this extraordinary conversation,
was now softened again;—yet she felt it
her duty to check such ideas in her companion as the
last.
“This is not right, Mr. Willoughby.—Remember
that you are married. Relate only what in your
conscience you think necessary for me to hear.”
“Marianne’s note, by assuring
me that I was still as dear to her as in former days,
that in spite of the many, many weeks we had been
separated, she was as constant in her own feelings,
and as full of faith in the constancy of mine as ever,
awakened all my remorse. I say awakened, because
time and London, business and dissipation, had in
some measure quieted it, and I had been growing a
fine hardened villain, fancying myself indifferent
to her, and chusing to fancy that she too must have
become indifferent to me; talking to myself of our
past attachment as a mere idle, trifling business,
shrugging up my shoulders in proof of its being so,
and silencing every reproach, overcoming every scruple,
by secretly saying now and then, ’I shall be
heartily glad to hear she is well married.’—
But this note made me know myself better. I felt
that she was infinitely dearer to me than any other
woman in the world, and that I was using her infamously.
But every thing was then just settled between Miss
Grey and me. To retreat was impossible.
All that I had to do, was to avoid you both.
I sent no answer to Marianne, intending by that to
preserve myself from her farther notice; and for some
time I was even determined not to call in Berkeley
Street;—but at last, judging it wiser to
affect the air of a cool, common acquaintance than
anything else, I watched you all safely out of the
house one morning, and left my name.”
“Watched us out of the house!”
“Even so. You would be
surprised to hear how often I watched you, how often
I was on the point of falling in with you. I
have entered many a shop to avoid your sight, as the
carriage drove by. Lodging as I did in Bond Street,
there was hardly a day in which I did not catch a glimpse
of one or other of you; and nothing but the most constant
watchfulness on my side, a most invariably prevailing
desire to keep out of your sight, could have separated
us so long. I avoided the Middletons as much
as possible, as well as everybody else who was likely
to prove an acquaintance in common. Not aware
of their being in town, however, I blundered on Sir
John, I believe, the first day of his coming, and
the day after I had called at Mrs. Jennings’s.
He asked me to a party, a dance at his house in the
evening.—Had he not told me as an inducement
that you and your sister were to be there, I should
have felt it too certain a thing, to trust myself
near him. The next morning brought another short
note from Marianne— still affectionate,
open, artless, confiding—everything that
could make my conduct most hateful. I could
not answer it. I tried—but could
not frame a sentence. But I thought of her, I
believe, every moment of the day. If you can
pity me, Miss Dashwood, pity my situation as it was
then. With my head and heart full of your
sister, I was forced to play the happy lover to another
woman!—Those three or four weeks were worse
than all. Well, at last, as I need not tell
you, you were forced on me; and what a sweet figure
I cut!—what an evening of agony it was!—
Marianne, beautiful as an angel on one side, calling
me Willoughby in such a tone!—Oh, God!—holding
out her hand to me, asking me for an explanation,
with those bewitching eyes fixed in such speaking
solicitude on my face!—and Sophia, jealous
as the devil on the other hand, looking all that was—Well,
it does not signify; it is over now.— Such
an evening!—I ran away from you all as soon
as I could; but not before I had seen Marianne’s
sweet face as white as death.—That
was the last, last look I ever had of her;—
the last manner in which she appeared to me.
It was a horrid sight!—yet when I thought
of her to-day as really dying, it was a kind of comfort
to me to imagine that I knew exactly how she would
appear to those, who saw her last in this world.
She was before me, constantly before me, as I travelled,
in the same look and hue.”
A short pause of mutual thoughtfulness
succeeded. Willoughby first rousing himself,
broke it thus:
“Well, let me make haste and
be gone. Your sister is certainly better, certainly
out of danger?”
“We are assured of it.”
“Your poor mother, too!—doting on
Marianne.”
“But the letter, Mr. Willoughby,
your own letter; have you any thing to say about that?”
“Yes, yes, that in particular.
Your sister wrote to me again, you know, the very
next morning. You saw what she said. I
was breakfasting at the Ellisons,—and her
letter, with some others, was brought to me there
from my lodgings. It happened to catch Sophia’s
eye before it caught mine—and its size,
the elegance of the paper, the hand-writing altogether,
immediately gave her a suspicion. Some vague
report had reached her before of my attachment to
some young lady in Devonshire, and what had passed
within her observation the preceding evening had marked
who the young lady was, and made her more jealous
than ever. Affecting that air of playfulness,
therefore, which is delightful in a woman one loves,
she opened the letter directly, and read its contents.
She was well paid for her impudence. She read
what made her wretched. Her wretchedness I could
have borne, but her passion—her malice—At
all events it must be appeased. And, in short—what
do you think of my wife’s style of letter-writing?—delicate—tender—
truly feminine—was it not?”
“Your wife!—The letter
was in your own hand-writing.”
“Yes, but I had only the credit
of servilely copying such sentences as I was ashamed
to put my name to. The original was all her own—her
own happy thoughts and gentle diction. But what
could I do!—we were engaged, every thing
in preparation, the day almost fixed—But
I am talking like a fool. Preparation
—In
honest words, her money was necessary to me, and in
a situation like mine, any thing was to be done to
prevent a rupture. And after all, what did it
signify to my character in the opinion of Marianne
and her friends, in what language my answer was couched?—It
must have been only to one end. My business was
to declare myself a scoundrel, and whether I did it
with a bow or a bluster was of little importance.—
‘I am ruined for ever in their opinion—’
said I to myself—’I am shut out for
ever from their society, they already think me an
unprincipled fellow, this letter will only make them
think me a blackguard one.’ Such were my
reasonings, as, in a sort of desperate carelessness,
I copied my wife’s words, and parted with the
last relics of Marianne. Her three notes—unluckily
they were all in my pocketbook, or I should have denied
their existence, and hoarded them for ever—I
was forced to put them up, and could not even kiss
them. And the lock of hair—that too
I had always carried about me in the same pocket-book,
which was now searched by Madam with the most ingratiating
virulence,—the dear lock—all,
every memento was torn from me.”
“You are very wrong, Mr. Willoughby,
very blamable,” said Elinor, while her voice,
in spite of herself, betrayed her compassionate emotion;
“you ought not to speak in this way, either
of Mrs. Willoughby or my sister. You had made
your own choice. It was not forced on you.
Your wife has a claim to your politeness, to your respect,
at least. She must be attached to you, or she
would not have married you. To treat her with
unkindness, to speak of her slightingly is no atonement
to Marianne—nor can I suppose it a relief
to your own conscience.”
“Do not talk to me of my wife,”
said he with a heavy sigh.— “She
does not deserve your compassion.—She knew
I had no regard for her when we married.—Well,
married we were, and came down to Combe Magna to be
happy, and afterwards returned to town to be gay.—And
now do you pity me, Miss Dashwood?—or have
I said all this to no purpose?— Am I—be
it only one degree—am I less guilty in your
opinion than I was before?—My intentions
were not always wrong. Have I explained away
any part of my guilt?”
“Yes, you have certainly removed
something—a little.— You have
proved yourself, on the whole, less faulty than I
had believed you. You have proved your heart
less wicked, much less wicked. But I hardly
know—the misery that you have inflicted—I
hardly know what could have made it worse.”
“Will you repeat to your sister
when she is recovered, what I have been telling you?—Let
me be a little lightened too in her opinion as well
as in yours. You tell me that she has forgiven
me already. Let me be able to fancy that a better
knowledge of my heart, and of my present feelings,
will draw from her a more spontaneous, more natural,
more gentle, less dignified, forgiveness. Tell
her of my misery and my penitence—tell
her that my heart was never inconstant to her, and
if you will, that at this moment she is dearer to
me than ever.”
“I will tell her all that is
necessary to what may comparatively be called, your
justification. But you have not explained to
me the particular reason of your coming now, nor how
you heard of her illness.”
“Last night, in Drury Lane lobby,
I ran against Sir John Middleton, and when he saw
who I was—for the first time these two
months—he spoke to me.—That he
had cut me ever since my marriage, I had seen without
surprise or resentment. Now, however, his good-natured,
honest, stupid soul, full of indignation against me,
and concern for your sister, could not resist the
temptation of telling me what he knew ought to—though
probably he did not think it would—vex
me horridly. As bluntly as he could speak it,
therefore, he told me that Marianne Dashwood was dying
of a putrid fever at Cleveland—a letter
that morning received from Mrs. Jennings declared
her danger most imminent—the Palmers are
all gone off in a fright, &c.—I was too
much shocked to be able to pass myself off as insensible
even to the undiscerning Sir John. His heart
was softened in seeing mine suffer; and so much of
his ill-will was done away, that when we parted, he
almost shook me by the hand while he reminded me of
an old promise about a pointer puppy. What I
felt on hearing that your sister was dying—and
dying too, believing me the greatest villain upon
earth, scorning, hating me in her latest moments—for
how could I tell what horrid projects might not have
been imputed? One person I was sure would
represent me as capable of any thing— What
I felt was dreadful!—My resolution was soon
made, and at eight o’clock this morning I was
in my carriage. Now you know all.”
Elinor made no answer. Her thoughts
were silently fixed on the irreparable injury which
too early an independence and its consequent habits
of idleness, dissipation, and luxury, had made in
the mind, the character, the happiness, of a man who,
to every advantage of person and talents, united a
disposition naturally open and honest, and a feeling,
affectionate temper. The world had made him
extravagant and vain—Extravagance and vanity
had made him cold-hearted and selfish. Vanity,
while seeking its own guilty triumph at the expense
of another, had involved him in a real attachment,
which extravagance, or at least its offspring, necessity,
had required to be sacrificed. Each faulty propensity
in leading him to evil, had led him likewise to punishment.
The attachment, from which against honour, against
feeling, against every better interest he had outwardly
torn himself, now, when no longer allowable, governed
every thought; and the connection, for the sake of
which he had, with little scruple, left her sister
to misery, was likely to prove a source of unhappiness
to himself of a far more incurable nature. From
a reverie of this kind she was recalled at the end
of some minutes by Willoughby, who, rousing himself
from a reverie at least equally painful, started up
in preparation for going, and said—
“There is no use in staying here; I must be
off.”
“Are you going back to town?”
“No—to Combe Magna.
I have business there; from thence to town in a day
or two. Good bye.”
He held out his hand. She could
not refuse to give him hers’s;—he
pressed it with affection.
“And you do think something
better of me than you did?”—said
he, letting it fall, and leaning against the mantel-piece
as if forgetting he was to go.
Elinor assured him that she did;—that
she forgave, pitied, wished him well—was
even interested in his happiness—and added
some gentle counsel as to the behaviour most likely
to promote it. His answer was not very encouraging.
“As to that,” said he,
“I must rub through the world as well as I can.
Domestic happiness is out of the question. If,
however, I am allowed to think that you and yours feel
an interest in my fate and actions, it may be the means—it
may put me on my guard—at least, it may
be something to live for. Marianne to be sure
is lost to me for ever. Were I even by any blessed
chance at liberty again—”
Elinor stopped him with a reproof.
“Well,”—he
replied—“once more good bye.
I shall now go away and live in dread of one event.”
“What do you mean?”
“Your sister’s marriage.”
“You are very wrong. She
can never be more lost to you than she is now.”
“But she will be gained by some
one else. And if that some one should be the
very he whom, of all others, I could least bear—but
I will not stay to rob myself of all your compassionate
goodwill, by shewing that where I have most injured
I can least forgive. Good bye,—God
bless you!”
And with these words, he almost ran
out of the room.