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

not to be met with by every Girl. Oh! how I long to be with

him! I intend to send him the following in answer to his Letter

tomorrow.

My dearest Musgrove–. Words cannot express how happy your

Letter made me; I thought I should have cried for joy, for I love

you better than any body in the World. I think you the most

amiable, and the handsomest Man in England, and so to be sure you

are. I never read so sweet a Letter in my Life. Do write me

another just like it, and tell me you are in love with me in

every other line. I quite die to see you. How shall we manage

to see one another? for we are so much in love that we cannot

live asunder. Oh! my dear Musgrove you cannot think how

impatiently I wait for the death of my Uncle and Aunt–If they

will not Die soon, I beleive I shall run mad, for I get more in

love with you every day of my Life.

How happy your Sister is to enjoy the pleasure of your Company in

her house, and how happy every body in London must be because you

are there. I hope you will be so kind as to write to me again

soon, for I never read such sweet Letters as yours. I am my

dearest Musgrove most truly and faithfully yours for ever and

ever

Henrietta Halton.

I hope he will like my answer; it is as good a one as I can write

though nothing to his; Indeed I had always heard what a dab he

was at a Love-letter. I saw him you know for the first time at

Lady Scudamores–And when I saw her Ladyship afterwards she asked

me how I liked her Cousin Musgrove?

“Why upon my word said I, I think he is a very handsome young

Man.”

“I am glad you think so replied she, for he is distractedly in

love with you.”

“Law! Lady Scudamore said I, how can you talk so ridiculously?”

“Nay, t’is very true answered she, I assure you, for he was in

love with you from the first moment he beheld you.”

“I wish it may be true said I, for that is the only kind of love

I would give a farthing for–There is some sense in being in love

at first sight.”

“Well, I give you Joy of your conquest, replied Lady Scudamore,

and I beleive it to have been a very complete one; I am sure it

is not a contemptible one, for my Cousin is a charming young

fellow, has seen a great deal of the World, and writes the best

Love-letters I ever read.”

This made me very happy, and I was excessively pleased with my

conquest. However, I thought it was proper to give myself a few

Airs–so I said to her–

“This is all very pretty Lady Scudamore, but you know that we

young Ladies who are Heiresses must not throw ourselves away upon

Men who have no fortune at all.”

“My dear Miss Halton said she, I am as much convinced of that as

you can be, and I do assure you that I should be the last person

to encourage your marrying anyone who had not some pretensions to

expect a fortune with you. Mr Musgrove is so far from being

poor that he has an estate of several hundreds an year which is

capable of great Improvement, and an excellent House, though at

Present it is not quite in repair.”

“If that is the case replied I, I have nothing more to say

against him, and if as you say he is an informed young Man and

can write a good Love-letter, I am sure I have no reason to find

fault with him for admiring me, tho’ perhaps I may not marry him

for all that Lady Scudamore.”

“You are certainly under no obligation to marry him answered her

Ladyship, except that which love himself will dictate to you, for

if I am not greatly mistaken you are at this very moment unknown

to yourself, cherishing a most tender affection for him.”

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