您的位置 : 首页 > 英文著作
Jane Talbot
Letter 24 - To Henry Colden
Charles Brockden Brown
下载:Jane Talbot.txt
本书全文检索:
       _ Letter XXIV - To Henry Colden
       To Henry Colden
       Philadelphia, Nov. 2.
       Ah, my friend, how mortifying are those proofs of thy excellence? How deep is that debasement into which I am sunk, when I compare myself with thee!
       It cannot be want of love that makes thee so easily give me up. My feeble and jealous heart is ever prone to suspect; yet I ought at length to be above these ungenerous surmises.
       My own demerits, my fickleness, my precipitation, are so great, and so unlike thy inflexible spirit, that I am ever ready to impute to thee that contempt for me which I know I so richly deserve. I am astonished that so poor a thing as I am, thus continually betraying her weakness, should retain thy affection; yet at any proof of coldness or indifference in thee do I grow impatient, melancholy; a strange mixture of upbraiding for myself, and resentment for thee, occupies my feelings.
       I have read thy letter. I shuddered when I painted to myself thy unhappiness on receiving tidings of my resolution to join my mother. I felt that thy reluctance to part with me would form the strongest obstacle to going; and yet, being convinced that I must go, I wanted thee to counterfeit indifference, to feign compliance.
       And such a wayward heart is mine that, now these assurances of thy compliance have come to hand, I am not satisfied! The poor contriver wished to find in thee an affectation of indifference. Her humanity would be satisfied with that appearance; but her pride demanded that it should be no more than a veil, behind which the inconsolable, the bleeding heart should be distinctly seen.
       You are too much in earnest in your equanimity. You study my exclusive happiness with too unimpassioned a soul. You are pleased when I am pleased; but not, it seems, the more so from any relation which my pleasure bears to you: no matter what it is that pleases me, so I am but pleased, you are content.
       I don't like this oblivion of self. I want to be essential to your happiness. I want to act with a view to your interests and wishes,--these wishes requiring my love and my company for your own sake.
       But I have got into a maze again,--puzzling myself with intricate distinctions. I can't be satisfied with telling you that I am not well, but I must be inspecting with these careful eyes into causes, and labouring to tell you of what nature my malady is.
       It has always been so. I have always found an unaccountable pleasure in dissecting, as it were, my heart; uncovering, one by one, its many folds, and laying it before you, as a country is shown in a map. This voluble tongue and this prompt, pen! what volumes have I talked to you on that bewitching theme,--myself!
       And yet, loquacious as I am, I never interrupted you when you were talking. It was always such a favour when these rigid fibres of yours relaxed; and yet I praise myself for more forbearance than belongs to me. The little impertinent has often stopped your mouth,--at times too when your talk charmed her most; but then it was not with words.
       But have I not said this a score of times before? and why do I indulge this prate now?
       To say truth, I am perplexed and unhappy. Your letter has made me so. My heart flutters too much to allow me to attend to the subject of your letter. I follow this rambling leader merely to escape from more arduous paths, and I send you this scribble because I must write to you. Adieu.
       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