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<h2> LETTER LXII </h2>
<p>MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ. TRENT, DEC. 3—14.</p>
<p>To-morrow is to be the day, that will, in all probability, send either one
or two ghosts to attend the manes of my CLARISSA.</p>
<p>I arrived here yesterday; and inquiring for an English gentleman of the
name of Morden, soon found out the Colonel's lodgings. He had been in town
two days; and left his name at every probable place.</p>
<p>He was gone to ride out; and I left my name, and where to be found; and in
the evening he made me a visit.</p>
<p>He was plaguy gloomy. That was not I. But yet he told me that I had acted
like a man of true spirit in my first letter; and with honour, in giving
him so readily this meeting. He wished I had in other respects; and then
we might have seen each other upon better terms than now we did.</p>
<p>I said there was no recalling what was passed; and that I wished some
things had not been done, as well as he.</p>
<p>To recriminate now, he said, would be as exasperating as unavailable. And
as I had so cheerfully given him this opportunity, words should give place
to business.—Your choice, Mr. Lovelace, of time, of place, of
weapon, shall be my choice.</p>
<p>The two latter be your's, Mr. Morden. The time to-morrow, or next day, as
you please.</p>
<p>Next day, then, Mr. Lovelace; and we'll ride out to-morrow, to fix the
place.</p>
<p>Agreed, Sir.</p>
<p>Well: now, Mr. Lovelace, do you choose the weapon.</p>
<p>I said I believed we might be upon an equal footing with the single
rapier; but, if he thought otherwise, I had no objection to a pistol.</p>
<p>I will only say, replied he, that the chances may be more equal by the
sword, because we can neither of us be to seek in that; and you would
stand, says he, a worse chance, as I apprehend, with a pistol; and yet I
have brought two, that you may take your choice of either; for, added he,
I have never missed a mark at pistol-distance, since I knew how to hold a
pistol.</p>
<p>I told him, that he spoke like himself; that I was expert enough that way,
to embrace it, if he chose it; though not so sure of my mark as he
pretended to be. Yet the devil's in it, Colonel, if I, who have slit a
bullet in two upon a knife's edge, hit not my man. So I have no objection
to a pistol, if it be your choice. No man, I'll venture to say, has a
steadier hand or eye than I have.</p>
<p>They may both be of use to you, Sir, at the sword, as well as at the
pistol: the sword, therefore, be the thing, if you please.</p>
<p>With all my heart.</p>
<p>We parted with a solemn sort of ceremonious civility: and this day I
called upon him; and we rode out together to fix upon the place: and both
being of one mind, and hating to put off for the morrow what could be done
to-day, would have decided it then: but De la Tour, and the Colonel's
valet, who attended us, being unavoidably let into the secret, joined to
beg we would have with us a surgeon from Brixen, whom La Tour had fallen
in with there, and who had told him he was to ride next morning to bleed a
person in a fever, at a lone cottage, which, by the surgeon's description,
was not far from the place where we then were, if it were not that very
cottage within sight of us.</p>
<p>They overtook so to manage it, that the surgeon should know nothing of the
matter till his assistance was called in. And La Tour, being, as I assured
the Colonel, a ready contriving fellow, [whom I ordered to obey him as
myself, were the chance to be in his favour,] we both agreed to defer the
decision till to-morrow, and to leave the whole about the surgeon to the
management of our two valets; enjoining them absolute secrecy: and so rode
back again by different ways.</p>
<p>We fixed upon a little lone valley for the spot—ten to-morrow
morning the time—and single rapier the word. Yet I repeatedly told
him, that I valued myself so much upon my skill in that weapon, that I
would wish him to choose any other.</p>
<p>He said it was a gentleman's weapon; and he who understood it not, wanted
a qualification that he ought to suffer for not having: but that, as to
him, one weapon was as good as another, throughout all the instruments of
offence.</p>
<p>So, Jack, you see I take no advantage of him: but my devil must deceive
me, if he take not his life or his death at my hands before eleven
to-morrow morning.</p>
<p>His valet and mine are to be present; but both strictly enjoined to be
impartial and inactive: and, in return for my civility of the like nature,
he commanded his to be assisting me, if he fell.</p>
<p>We are to ride thither, and to dismount when at the place; and his footman
and mine are to wait at an appointed distance, with a chaise to carry off
to the borders of the Venetian territories the survivor, if one drop; or
to assist either or both, as occasion may demand.</p>
<p>And thus, Belford, is the matter settled.</p>
<p>A shower of rain has left me nothing else to do; and therefore I write
this letter; though I might as well have deferred it till to-morrow twelve
o'clock, when I doubt not to be able to write again, to assure you much I
am</p>
<p>Yours, &c. LOVELACE.</p>
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