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Lesley Castle: An unfinished Novel in Letters
LETTER the NINTH
Jane Austen
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       _ LETTER the NINTH
       Mrs MARLOWE to Miss LUTTERELL
       Grosvenor Street, April 10th
       Need I say my dear Eloisa how wellcome your letter was to me I
       cannot give a greater proof of the pleasure I received from it,
       or of the Desire I feel that our Correspondence may be regular
       and frequent than by setting you so good an example as I now do
       in answering it before the end of the week--. But do not imagine
       that I claim any merit in being so punctual; on the contrary I
       assure you, that it is a far greater Gratification to me to write
       to you, than to spend the Evening either at a Concert or a Ball.
       Mr Marlowe is so desirous of my appearing at some of the Public
       places every evening that I do not like to refuse him, but at the
       same time so much wish to remain at Home, that independant of the
       Pleasure I experience in devoting any portion of my Time to my
       Dear Eloisa, yet the Liberty I claim from having a letter to
       write of spending an Evening at home with my little Boy, you know
       me well enough to be sensible, will of itself be a sufficient
       Inducement (if one is necessary) to my maintaining with Pleasure
       a Correspondence with you. As to the subject of your letters to
       me, whether grave or merry, if they concern you they must be
       equally interesting to me; not but that I think the melancholy
       Indulgence of your own sorrows by repeating them and dwelling on
       them to me, will only encourage and increase them, and that it
       will be more prudent in you to avoid so sad a subject; but yet
       knowing as I do what a soothing and melancholy Pleasure it must
       afford you, I cannot prevail on myself to deny you so great an
       Indulgence, and will only insist on your not expecting me to
       encourage you in it, by my own letters; on the contrary I intend
       to fill them with such lively Wit and enlivening Humour as shall
       even provoke a smile in the sweet but sorrowfull countenance of
       my Eloisa.
       In the first place you are to learn that I have met your sisters
       three freinds Lady Lesley and her Daughters, twice in Public
       since I have been here. I know you will be impatient to hear my
       opinion of the Beauty of three Ladies of whom you have heard so
       much. Now, as you are too ill and too unhappy to be vain, I
       think I may venture to inform you that I like none of their faces
       so well as I do your own. Yet they are all handsome--Lady Lesley
       indeed I have seen before; her Daughters I beleive would in
       general be said to have a finer face than her Ladyship, and yet
       what with the charms of a Blooming complexion, a little
       Affectation and a great deal of small-talk, (in each of which she
       is superior to the young Ladies) she will I dare say gain herself
       as many admirers as the more regular features of Matilda, and
       Margaret. I am sure you will agree with me in saying that they
       can none of them be of a proper size for real Beauty, when you
       know that two of them are taller and the other shorter than
       ourselves. In spite of this Defect (or rather by reason of it)
       there is something very noble and majestic in the figures of the
       Miss Lesleys, and something agreably lively in the appearance of
       their pretty little Mother-in-law. But tho' one may be majestic
       and the other lively, yet the faces of neither possess that
       Bewitching sweetness of my Eloisas, which her present languor is
       so far from diminushing. What would my Husband and Brother say
       of us, if they knew all the fine things I have been saying to you
       in this letter. It is very hard that a pretty woman is never to
       be told she is so by any one of her own sex without that person's
       being suspected to be either her determined Enemy, or her
       professed Toad-eater. How much more amiable are women in that
       particular! One man may say forty civil things to another
       without our supposing that he is ever paid for it, and provided
       he does his Duty by our sex, we care not how Polite he is to his
       own.
       Mrs Lutterell will be so good as to accept my compliments,
       Charlotte, my Love, and Eloisa the best wishes for the recovery
       of her Health and Spirits that can be offered by her affectionate
       Freind
       E. Marlowe.
       I am afraid this letter will be but a poor specimen of my Powers
       in the witty way; and your opinion of them will not be greatly
       increased when I assure you that I have been as entertaining as I
       possibly could. _