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

what did Mr Musgrove say to this?”

“He replied that he was under a melancholy necessity of owning

the truth of what I said, and that therefore if he should be the

happy Creature destined to be the Husband of the Beautiful

Henrietta he must bring himself to wait, however impatiently, for

the fortunate day, when she might be freed from the power of

worthless Relations and able to bestow herself on him.”

What a noble Creature he is! Oh! Matilda what a fortunate one I

am, who am to be his Wife! My Aunt is calling me to come and

make the pies, so adeiu my dear freind, and beleive me yours etc–

H. Halton.

Finis.

*

SCRAPS

To Miss FANNY CATHERINE AUSTEN

MY Dear Neice

As I am prevented by the great distance between Rowling and

Steventon from superintending your Education myself, the care of

which will probably on that account devolve on your Father and

Mother, I think it is my particular Duty to Prevent your feeling

as much as possible the want of my personal instructions, by

addressing to you on paper my Opinions and Admonitions on the

conduct of Young Women, which you will find expressed in the

following pages.–

I am my dear Neice

Your affectionate Aunt

The Author.

THE FEMALE PHILOSOPHER

A LETTER

My Dear Louisa

Your friend Mr Millar called upon us yesterday in his way to

Bath, whither he is going for his health; two of his daughters

were with him, but the eldest and the three Boys are with their

Mother in Sussex. Though you have often told me that Miss Millar

was remarkably handsome, you never mentioned anything of her

Sisters’ beauty; yet they are certainly extremely pretty. I’ll

give you their description.–Julia is eighteen; with a

countenance in which Modesty, Sense and Dignity are happily

blended, she has a form which at once presents you with Grace,

Elegance and Symmetry. Charlotte who is just sixteen is shorter

than her Sister, and though her figure cannot boast the easy

dignity of Julia’s, yet it has a pleasing plumpness which is in a

different way as estimable. She is fair and her face is

expressive sometimes of softness the most bewitching, and at

others of Vivacity the most striking. She appears to have

infinite Wit and a good humour unalterable; her conversation

during the half hour they set with us, was replete with humourous

sallies, Bonmots and repartees; while the sensible, the amiable

Julia uttered sentiments of Morality worthy of a heart like her

own. Mr Millar appeared to answer the character I had always

received of him. My Father met him with that look of Love, that

social Shake, and cordial kiss which marked his gladness at

beholding an old and valued freind from whom thro’ various

circumstances he had been separated nearly twenty years. Mr

Millar observed (and very justly too) that many events had

befallen each during that interval of time, which gave occasion

to the lovely Julia for making most sensible reflections on the

many changes in their situation which so long a period had

occasioned, on the advantages of some, and the disadvantages of

others. From this subject she made a short digression to the

instability of human pleasures and the uncertainty of their

duration, which led her to observe that all earthly Joys must be

imperfect. She was proceeding to illustrate this doctrine by

examples from the Lives of great Men when the Carriage came to

the Door and the amiable Moralist with her Father and Sister was

obliged to depart; but not without a promise of spending five or

six months with us on their return. We of course mentioned you,

and I assure you that ample Justice was done to your Merits by

all. “Louisa Clarke (said I) is in general a very pleasant Girl,

yet sometimes her good humour is clouded by Peevishness, Envy and

Spite. She neither wants Understanding or is without some

pretensions to Beauty, but these are so very trifling, that the

value she sets on her personal charms, and the adoration she

expects them to be offered are at once a striking example of her

vanity, her pride, and her folly.” So said I, and to my opinion

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