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Chapter no 9

The Expedition of Humphry Clinker

To Miss LYDIA MELFORD.

Miss Willis has pronounced my doomโ€”you are going away, dear Miss Melford!โ€”you are going to be removed, I know not whither! what shall I do? which way shall I turn for consolation? I know not what I sayโ€”all night long have I been tossed in a sea of doubts and fears, uncertainty and distraction, without being able to connect my thoughts, much less to form any consistent plan of conductโ€”I was even tempted to wish that I had never seen you; or that you had been less amiable, or less compassionate to your poor Wilson; and yet it would be detestable ingratitude in me to form such a wish, considering how much I am indebted to your goodness, and the ineffable pleasure I have derived from your indulgence and approbationโ€”Good God! I never heard your name mentioned without emotion! the most distant prospect of being admitted to your company, filled my whole soul with a kind of pleasing alarm! as the time approached, my heart beat with redoubled force, and every nerve thrilled with a transport of expectation; but, when I found myself actually in your presence;โ€”when I heard you speak;โ€”when I saw you smile; when I beheld your charming eyes turned favourably upon me; my breast was filled with such tumults of delight, as wholly deprived me of the power of utterance, and wrapt me in a delirium of joy!โ€”encouraged by your sweetness of temper and affability, I ventured to describe the feelings of my heartโ€”even then you did not check my presumptionโ€”you pitied my sufferings and gave me leave to hope you put a favourableโ€”perhaps too favourable a construction, on my appearanceโ€”certain it is, I am no player in loveโ€”I speak the language of my own heart; and have no prompter but nature. Yet there is something in this heart, which I have not yet disclosed.โ€”I flattered myselfโ€”But, I will notโ€”I must not proceed. Dear Miss Liddy! for Heavenโ€™s sake, contrive, if possible, some means of letting me speak to you before you leave Gloucester; otherwise, I know not what willโ€”But I begin to rave again.โ€”I will endeavour to bear this trial with fortitudeโ€”while I am capable of reflecting upon your tenderness and truth, I surely have no cause to despairโ€”a cloud hangs over me, and there is a dreadful weight upon my spirits! While you stay in this place, I shall continually hover about your lodgings, as the parted soul is said to linger about the grave where its mortal comfort lies.โ€”I know, if it is in your power, you will task your humanityโ€”your compassionโ€”shall I add, your affection?โ€”in order to assuage the almost intolerable disquiet that torments the heart of your afflicted,

WILSON GLOUCESTER, March 31.

 

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