您的位置 : 首页 > 英文著作
Jane Talbot
Letter 17 - To Henry Colden
Charles Brockden Brown
下载:Jane Talbot.txt
本书全文检索:
       _ Letter XVII - To Henry Colden
       (Enclosed Letter.)
       To Henry Colden
       Tuesday Morning.
       You went away this morning before I was awake. I think you might have stayed to breakfast; yet, on second thoughts, your early departure was best. _Perhaps_ it was so. You have made me very thoughtful to-day. What passed last night has left my mind at no liberty to read and to scribble as I used to do. How your omens made me shudder!
       I want to see you. Can't you come again this evening? but no; you must not. I must not be an encroacher. I must judge of others, and of their claims upon your company, by myself and my own claims. Yet I should be glad to see that creature who would dare to enter into competition with _me_.
       But I may as well hold my peace. My rights will not be admitted by others. Indeed, no soul but yourself can know them in all their extent, and, what is all I care for, _you_ are far from being strictly just to me!
       Don't be angry, Hal. Skip the last couple of sentences, or think of them as not mine: I disown them. To-morrow, at six, the fire shall be stirred, the candles lighted, and the sofa placed in order due. I shall be at home to _nobody; mind that_.
       _I am loath to mention one thing, however, but I must. Though nothing be due to the absent man, somewhat is_ _due to myself. I have been excessively uneasy the whole day. I am terrified at certain consequences. What may not happen if--No; the last night's scene must not be repeated; at least for a month to come. The sweet oblivion of the future and past lasted only for the night. Now I have leisure to look forward, and am resolved (don't laugh at my resolves; I am quite in earnest) to keep thee at a distance for at least a fortnight to come. It shall be a whole month if thou dost not submit with a good grace_.
       JANE TALBOT. _
用户中心

本站图书检索

本书目录

Letter 1 - To Henry Colden
Letter 2 - To Henry Colden
Letter 3 - To Henry Colden
Letter 4 - To Henry Colden
Letter 6 - To Henry Colden
Letter 7 - To Henry Golden
Letter 8 - To Jane Talbot
Letter 9 - To Henry Colden
Letter 10 - To Jane Talbot
Letter 11 - To Mrs. Fielder
Letter 12 - To Mrs. Fielder
Letter 13 - To Jane Talbot
Letter 14 - To Mrs. Fielder
Letter 15 - To Jane Talbot
Letter 16 - To the same
Letter 17 - To Henry Colden
Letter 18 - To Mr. Henry Colden
Letter 19 - To Mrs. Fielder
Letter 20 - To Henry Colden
Letter 21 - To Henry Colden
Letter 22 - To Jane Talbot
Letter 23 - To Mrs. Fielder
Letter 24 - To Henry Colden
Letter 25 - To the Same
Letter 26 - To Mrs. Fielder
Letter 27 - To Mrs. Talbot
Letter 28 - To Mrs. Talbot
Letter 29 - To the Same
Letter 30 - To the same
Letter 31 - To Henry Colden
Letter 31 - To Henry Colden.
Letter 32 - To Jane Talbot
Letter 33 - To Henry Colden
Letter 34 - To Henry Colden
Letter 35 - To Mrs. Talbot
Letter 36 - To Henry Colden
Letter 37 - To the Same
Letter 38 - To Henry Colden, Senior
Letter 39 - To Mrs. Talbot
Letter 40 - To James Montford
Letter 41 - To Henry Colden
Letter 42 - To Mrs. Fielder
Letter 43 - To James Montford
Letter 44 - To Henry Colden
Letter 45 - To Henry Colden
Letter 46 - To James Montford
Letter 47 - To Henry Colden
Letter 48 - To Mrs. Fielder
Letter 49 - To James Montford
Letter 50 - To Mr. Colden
Letter 51 - To James Montford
Letter 52 - To Mrs. Fielder
Letter 53 - To James Montford
Letter 54
Letter 55 - To Henry Colden
Letter 56 - To Mrs. Montford
Letter 57 - To Jane Talbot
Letter 58 - To Mrs. Montford
Letter 59 - To Jane Talbot
Letter 60 - To Mrs. Montford
Letter 61 - To Mrs. Talbot
Letter 62 - To Mrs. Montford
Letter 63 - To Mrs. Talbot
Letter 64 - To Mrs. Talbot
Letter 65 - To G. Cartwright
Letter 66 - To Jane Talbot
Letter 67 - To Mrs. Talbot
Letter 68 - To Mrs. Montford
Letter 69 - To Mr. Montford
Letter 70 - To Henry Golden