<p>CLARISSA HARLOWE ************************* <SPAN name="link2H_4_0040" id="link2H_4_0040"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> LETTER XXXVII </h2>
<p>MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ. M. HALL, THURSDAY, SEPT. 14.</p>
<p>Ever since the fatal seventh of this month, I have been lost to myself,
and to all the joys of life. I might have gone farther back than that
fatal seventh; which, for the future, I will never see anniversarily
revolve but in sables; only till that cursed day I had some gleams of hope
now-and-then darting in upon me.</p>
<p>They tell me of an odd letter I wrote to you.* I remember I did write. But
very little of the contents of what I wrote do I remember.</p>
<p>* See his delirious Letter, No. XXIII.</p>
<p>I have been in a cursed way. Methinks something has been working strangely
retributive. I never was such a fool as to disbelieve a Providence; yet am
I not for resolving into judgments every thing that seems to wear an
avenging face. Yet if we must be punished either here or hereafter for our
misdeeds, better here, say I, than hereafter. Have I not then an interest
to think my punishment already not only begun but completed since what I
have suffered, and do suffer, passes all description?</p>
<p>To give but one instance of the retributive—here I, who was the
barbarous cause of the loss of senses for a week together to the most
inimitable of women, have been punished with the loss of my own—
preparative to—who knows what?—When, Oh! when, shall I know a
joyful hour?</p>
<p>I am kept excessively low; and excessively low I am. This sweet creature's
posthumous letter sticks close to me. All her excellencies rise up hourly
to my remembrance.</p>
<p>Yet dare I not indulge in these melancholy reflections. I find my head
strangely working again—Pen, begone!</p>
<p>FRIDAY, SEPT. 15.</p>
<p>I resume, in a sprightly vein, I hope—Mowbray and Tourville have
just now—</p>
<p>But what of Mowbray and Tourville?—What's the world?—What's
any body in it?—</p>
<p>Yet they are highly exasperated against thee, for the last letter thou
wrotest to them*—such an unfriendly, such a merciless—</p>
<p>* This Letter appears not.</p>
<p>But it won't do!—I must again lay down my pen.—O Belford!
Belford! I am still, I am still most miserably absent from myself!—Shall
never, never more be what I was!</p>
<p>***</p>
<p>Saturday—Sunday—Nothing done. Incapable of any thing.</p>
<p>MONDAY, SEPT. 18.</p>
<p>Heavy, d—n—y heavy and sick at soul, by Jupiter! I must come
into their expedient. I must see what change of climate will do.</p>
<p>You tell these fellows, and you tell me, of repenting and reforming; but I
can do neither. He who can, must not have the extinction of a Clarissa
Harlowe to answer for.—Harlowe!—Curse upon the name!—and
curse upon myself for not changing it, as I might have done!—Yet I
have no need of urging a curse upon myself—I have it effectually.</p>
<p>'To say I once respected you with a preference!'*—In what stiff
language does maidenly modesty on these nice occasion express itself!—To
say I once loved you, is the English; and there is truth and ease in the
expression.—'To say I once loved you,' then let it be, 'is what I
ought to blush to own.'</p>
<p>* See Letter XXXVI. of this volume.</p>
<p>And dost thou own it, excellent creature?—and dost thou then own it?—
What music in these words from such an angel!—What would I give that
my Clarissa were in being, and could and would own that she loved me?</p>
<p>'But, indeed, Sir, I have been long greatly above you.' Long, my blessed
charmer!—Long, indeed, for you have been ever greatly above me, and
above your sex, and above all the world.</p>
<p>'That preference was not grounded on ignoble motives.'</p>
<p>What a wretch was I, to be so distinguished by her, and yet to be so
unworthy of her hope to reclaim me!</p>
<p>Then, how generous her motives! Not for her own sake merely, not
altogether for mine, did she hope to reclaim me; but equally for the sake
of innocents who might otherwise be ruined by me.</p>
<p>And now, why did she write this letter, and why direct it to be given me
when an event the most deplorable had taken place, but for my good, and
with a view to the safety of innocents she knew not?—And when was
this letter written? Was it not at the time, at the very time, that I had
been pursuing her, as I may say, from place to place; when her soul was
bowed down by calamity and persecution; and herself was denied all
forgiveness from relations the most implacable?</p>
<p>Exalted creature!—And couldst thou, at such a time, and so early,
and in such circumstances, have so far subdued thy own just resentments,
as to wish happiness to the principal author of all thy distresses?—Wish
happiness to him who had robbed thee 'of all thy favourite expectations in
this life?' To him who had been the cause that thou wert cut off in the
bloom of youth?'</p>
<p>Heavenly aspirer!—What a frame must thou be in, to be able to use
the word ONLY, in mentioning these important deprivations!—And as
this was before thou puttest off immortality, may I not presume that thou
now,</p>
<p>—— with pitying eye,<br/>
Not derogating from thy perfect bliss,<br/>
Survey'st all Heav'n around, and wishest for me?<br/></p>
<p>'Consider my ways.'—Dear life of my life! Of what avail is
consideration now, when I have lost the dear creature, for whose sake
alone it was worth while to have consideration?—Lost her beyond
retrieving—swallowed up by the greedy grave—for ever lost her—that,
that's the thing—matchless woman, how does this reflection wound me!</p>
<p>'Your golden dream cannot long last.'—Divine prophetess! my golden
dream is already over. 'Thought and reflection are no longer to be kept
off.' —No longer continues that 'hardened insensibility' thou
chargest upon me. 'Remorse has broken in upon me. Dreadful is my
condition;—it is all reproach and horror with me!'—A thousand
vultures in turn are preying upon my heart!</p>
<p>But no more of these fruitless reflections—since I am incapable of
writing any thing else; since my pen will slide into this gloomy subject,
whether I will or not; I will once more quit it; nor will I again resume
it, till I can be more its master, and my own.</p>
<p>All I took pen to write for is however unwritten. It was, in few words, to
wish you to proceed with your communications, as usual. And why should you
not;—since, in her ever-to-be-lamented death, I know every thing
shocking and grievous—acquaint me, then, with all thou knowest,
which I do not know; how her relations, her cruel relations, take it; and
whether now the barbed dart of after-reflection sticks not in their
hearts, as in mine, up to the very feathers.</p>
<p>***</p>
<p>I will soon quit this kingdom. For now my Clarissa is no more, what is
there in it (in the world indeed) worth living for?—But shall I not
first, by some masterly mischief, avenge her and myself upon her cursed
family?</p>
<p>The accursed woman, they tell me, has broken her leg. Why was it not her
neck?—All, all, but what is owing to her relations, is the fault of
that woman, and of her hell-born nymphs. The greater the virtue, the
nobler the triumph, was a sentence for ever in their mouths.—I have
had it several times in my head to set fire to the execrable house; and to
watch at the doors and windows, that not a devil in it escape the
consuming flames. Had the house stood by itself, I had certainly done it.</p>
<p>But, it seems, the old wretch is in the way to be rewarded, without my
help. A shocking letter is received of somebody's in relation to her—
your's, I suppose—too shocking for me, they say, to see at present.*</p>
<p>* See Letter XXV. of this volume.</p>
<p>They govern me as a child in strings; yet did I suffer so much in my
fever, that I am willing to bear with them, till I can get tolerably well.</p>
<p>At present I can neither eat, drink, nor sleep. Yet are my disorders
nothing to what they were; for, Jack, my brain was on fire day and night;
and had it not been of the asbestos kind, it had all been consumed.</p>
<p>I had no distinct ideas, but of dark and confused misery; it was all
remorse and horror indeed!—Thoughts of hanging, drowning, shooting—then
rage, violence, mischief, and despair, took their turns with me. My lucid
intervals still worse, giving me to reflect upon what I was the hour
before, and what I was likely to be the next, and perhaps for life—
the sport of enemies!—the laughter of fools!—and the
hanging-sleeved, go-carted property of hired slaves; who were, perhaps, to
find their account in manacling, and (abhorred thought!) in personally
abusing me by blows and stripes!</p>
<p>Who can bear such reflections as these? TO be made to fear only, to such a
one as me, and to fear such wretches too?—What a thing was this, but
remotely to apprehend! And yet for a man to be in such a state as to
render it necessary for his dearest friends to suffer this to be done for
his own sake, and in order to prevent further mischief!—There is no
thinking of these things!</p>
<p>I will not think of them, therefore; but will either get a train of
cheerful ideas, or hang myself by to-morrow morning.</p>
<p>—— To be a dog, and dead,<br/>
Were paradise, to such a life as mine.<br/></p>
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