Lady Susan by Jane Austen. - HTML preview

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XXXVI

MR. DE COURCY TO LADY SUSAN

-‐-‐-‐-‐ Hotel.

Why would you write to me? Why do you require particulars? But, since it

must be so, I am obliged to declare that all the accounts of your

misconduct during the life, and since the death of Mr. Vernon, which had

reached me, in common with the world in general, and gained my entire

belief before I saw you, but which you, by the exertion of your perverted

abilities, had made me resolved to disallow, have been unanswerably proved

to me; nay more, I am assured that a connection, of which I had never

before entertained a thought, has for some time existed, and still

continues to exist, between you and the man whose family you robbed of its

peace in return for the hospitality with which you were received into it;

that you have corresponded with him ever since your leaving Langford; not

with his wife, but with him, and that he now visits you every day. Can you,

dare you deny it? and all this at the time when I was an encouraged, an

accepted lover! From what have I not escaped! I have only to be grateful.

Far from me be all complaint, every sigh of regret. My own folly had

endangered me, my preservation I owe to the kindness, the integrity of

another; but the unfortunate Mrs. Mainwaring, whose agonies while she

related the past seemed to threaten her reason, how is SHE to be consoled!

After such a discovery as this, you will scarcely affect further wonder at

my meaning in bidding you adieu. My understanding is at length restored,

and teaches no less to abhor the artifices which had subdued me than to

despise myself for the weakness on which their strength was founded.

R. DE COURCY.