Lady Susan by Jane Austen. - HTML preview

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XXI

MISS VERNON TO MR DE COURCY

Sir,-‐-‐I hope you will excuse this liberty; I am forced upon it by the

greatest distress, or I should be ashamed to trouble you. I am very

miserable about Sir James Martin, and have no other way in the world of

helping myself but by writing to you, for I am forbidden even speaking to

my uncle and aunt on the subject; and this being the case, I am afraid my

applying to you will appear no better than equivocation, and as if I

attended to the letter and not the spirit of mamma's commands. But if you

do not take my part and persuade her to break it off, I shall be half

distracted, for I cannot bear him. No human being but YOU could have any

chance of prevailing with her. If you will, therefore, have the unspeakably

great kindness of taking my part with her, and persuading her to send Sir

James away, I shall be more obliged to you than it is possible for me to

express. I always disliked him from the first: it is not a sudden fancy, I

assure you, sir; I always thought him silly and impertinent and

disagreeable, and now he is grown worse than ever. I would rather work for

my bread than marry him. I do not know how to apologize enough for this

letter; I know it is taking so great a liberty. I am aware how dreadfully

angry it will make mamma, but I remember the risk.

I am, Sir, your most humble servant,

F. S. V.