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<h2> LETTER XLIV </h2>
<p>[THIS IS THE POSTHUMOUS LETTER TO COL. MORDEN, REFERRED TO IN THE ABOVE.]</p>
<p>Superscribed,</p>
<p>TO MY BELOVED COUSIN WILLIAM MORDEN, ESQ. TO BE DELIVERED AFTER MY DEATH.</p>
<p>MY DEAREST COUSIN,</p>
<p>As it is uncertain, from my present weak state, whether, if living, I may
be in a condition to receive as I ought the favour you intend me of a
visit, when you come to London, I take this opportunity to return you,
while able, the humble acknowledgments of a grateful heart, for all your
goodness to me from childhood till now: and more particularly for your
present kind interposition in my favour—God Almighty for ever bless
you, dear Sir, for the kindness you endeavoured to procure for me!</p>
<p>One principal end of my writing to you, in this solemn manner, is, to beg
of you, which I do with the utmost earnestness, that when you come to hear
the particulars of my story, you will not suffer active resentment to take
place in your generous breast on my account.</p>
<p>Remember, my dear Cousin, that vengeance is God's province, and he has
undertaken to repay it; nor will you, I hope, invade that province:—
especially as there is no necessity for you to attempt to vindicate my
fame; since the offender himself (before he is called upon) has stood
forth, and offered to do me all the justice that you could have extorted
from him, had I lived: and when your own person may be endangered by
running an equal risque with a guilty man.</p>
<p>Duelling, Sir, I need not tell you, who have adorned a public character,
is not only an usurpation of the Divine prerogative; but it is an insult
upon magistracy and good government. 'Tis an impious act. 'Tis an attempt
to take away a life that ought not to depend upon a private sword; an act,
the consequence of which is to hurry a soul (all its sins upon its had)
into perdition; endangering that of the poor triumpher— since
neither intend to give to the other that chance, as I may call it, for the
Divine mercy, in an opportunity for repentance, which each presumes to
hope for himself.</p>
<p>Seek not then, I beseech you, Sir, to aggravate my fault, by a pursuit of
blood, which must necessarily be deemed a consequence of that fault. Give
not the unhappy man the merit (were you assuredly to be the victor) of
falling by your hand. At present he is the perfidious, the ungrateful
deceiver; but will not the forfeiture of his life, and the probable loss
of his soul, be a dreadful expiation for having made me miserable for a
few months only, and through that misery, by the Divine favour, happy to
all eternity?</p>
<p>In such a case, my Cousin, where shall the evil stop?—And who shall
avenge on you?—And who on your avenger?</p>
<p>Let the poor man's conscience, then, dear Sir, avenge me. He will one day
find punishment more than enough from that. Leave him to the chance of
repentance. If the Almighty will give him time for it, who should you deny
it him?—Let him still be the guilty aggressor; and let no one say,
Clarissa Harlowe is now amply revenged in his fall; or, in the case of
your's, (which Heaven avert!) that her fault, instead of being buried in
her grave, is perpetuated, and aggravated, by a loss far greater than that
of herself.</p>
<p>Often, Sir, has the more guilty been the vanquisher of the less. An Earl
of Shrewsbury, in the reign of Charles II. as I have read, endeavouring to
revenge the greatest injury that man can do to man, met with his death at
Barn-Elms, from the hand of the ignoble Duke who had vilely dishonoured
him. Nor can it be thought an unequal dispensation, were it generally to
happen that the usurper of the Divine prerogative should be punished for
his presumption by the man whom he sought to destroy, and who, however
previously criminal, is put, in this case, upon a necessary act of
self-defence.</p>
<p>May Heaven protect you, Sir, in all your ways; and, once more, I pray,
reward you for all your kindness to me! A kindness so worthy of your
heart, and so exceedingly grateful to mine: that of seeking to make peace,
and to reconcile parents to a once-beloved child; uncles to a niece late
their favourite; and a brother and sister to a sister whom once they
thought not unworthy of that tender relation. A kindness so greatly
preferable to the vengeance of a murdering sword.</p>
<p>Be a comforter, dear Sir, to my honoured parents, as you have been to me;
and may we, through the Divine goodness to us both, meet in that blessed
eternity, into which, as I humbly trust, I shall have entered when you
will read this.</p>
<p>So prays, and to her latest hour will pray, my dear Cousin Morden, my
friend, my guardian, but not my avenger—[dear Sir! remember that!—]</p>
<p>Your ever-affectionate and obliged CLARISSA HARLOWE.</p>
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