LOVE AND FRIENDSHIP and Other Early Works also spelled LOVE AND FREINDSHIP by Jane Austen

support of my assertion, and you will therefore have no way of

deciding the Affair but by coming to Lesley-Castle, and by a

personal acquaintance with Louisa, determine for yourself. Ah!

my dear Freind, how happy should I be to see you within these

venerable Walls! It is now four years since my removal from

School has separated me from you; that two such tender Hearts, so

closely linked together by the ties of simpathy and Freindship,

should be so widely removed from each other, is vastly moving. I

live in Perthshire, You in Sussex. We might meet in London, were

my Father disposed to carry me there, and were your Mother to be

there at the same time. We might meet at Bath, at Tunbridge, or

anywhere else indeed, could we but be at the same place together.

We have only to hope that such a period may arrive. My Father

does not return to us till Autumn; my Brother will leave Scotland

in a few Days; he is impatient to travel. Mistaken Youth! He

vainly flatters himself that change of Air will heal the Wounds

of a broken Heart! You will join with me I am certain my dear

Charlotte, in prayers for the recovery of the unhappy Lesley’s

peace of Mind, which must ever be essential to that of your

sincere freind

M. Lesley.

LETTER the SECOND

From Miss C. LUTTERELL to Miss M. LESLEY in answer.

Glenford Febry 12

I have a thousand excuses to beg for having so long delayed

thanking you my dear Peggy for your agreable Letter, which

beleive me I should not have deferred doing, had not every moment

of my time during the last five weeks been so fully employed in

the necessary arrangements for my sisters wedding, as to allow me

no time to devote either to you or myself. And now what provokes

me more than anything else is that the Match is broke off, and

all my Labour thrown away. Imagine how great the Dissapointment

must be to me, when you consider that after having laboured both

by Night and by Day, in order to get the Wedding dinner ready by

the time appointed, after having roasted Beef, Broiled Mutton,

and Stewed Soup enough to last the new-married Couple through the

Honey-moon, I had the mortification of finding that I had been

Roasting, Broiling and Stewing both the Meat and Myself to no

purpose. Indeed my dear Freind, I never remember suffering any

vexation equal to what I experienced on last Monday when my

sister came running to me in the store-room with her face as

White as a Whipt syllabub, and told me that Hervey had been

thrown from his Horse, had fractured his Scull and was pronounced

by his surgeon to be in the most emminent Danger. “Good God!

(said I) you dont say so? Why what in the name of Heaven will

become of all the Victuals! We shall never be able to eat it

while it is good. However, we’ll call in the Surgeon to help us.

I shall be able to manage the Sir-loin myself, my Mother will eat

the soup, and You and the Doctor must finish the rest.” Here I

was interrupted, by seeing my poor Sister fall down to appearance

Lifeless upon one of the Chests, where we keep our Table linen.

I immediately called my Mother and the Maids, and at last we

brought her to herself again; as soon as ever she was sensible,

she expressed a determination of going instantly to Henry, and

was so wildly bent on this Scheme, that we had the greatest

Difficulty in the World to prevent her putting it in execution;

at last however more by Force than Entreaty we prevailed on her

to go into her room; we laid her upon the Bed, and she continued

for some Hours in the most dreadful Convulsions. My Mother and I

continued in the room with her, and when any intervals of

tolerable Composure in Eloisa would allow us, we joined in

heartfelt lamentations on the dreadful Waste in our provisions

which this Event must occasion, and in concerting some plan for

getting rid of them. We agreed that the best thing we could do

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