Lady Susan by Jane Austen. - HTML preview

PLEASE NOTE: This is an HTML preview only and some elements such as links or page numbers may be incorrect.
Download the book in PDF, ePub, Kindle for a complete version.

XVIII

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