<h2>CHAPTER XXIX.</h2>
<p>Though this unfortunate occurrence in the curate’s
family was, according to his own phrase, “to be hushed
up,” yet certain persons of his, of the dean’s, and
of Lord Bendham’s house, immediately heard and talked of
it. Among these, Lady Bendham was most of all shocked and
offended: she said she “never could bear to hear Mr. Rymer
either pray or preach again; he had not conducted himself with
proper dignity either as a clergyman or a father; he should have
imitated the dean’s example in respect to Henry, and have
turned his daughter out of doors.”</p>
<p>Lord Bendham was less severe on the seduced, but had no mercy
on the seducer—“a vicious youth, without one
accomplishment to endear vice.” For vice, Lord
Bendham thought (with certain philosophers), might be most
exquisitely pleasing, in a pleasing garb. “But this
youth sinned without elegance, without one particle of wit, or an
atom of good breeding.”</p>
<p>Lady Clementina would not permit the subject to be mentioned a
second time in her hearing—extreme delicacy in woman she
knew was bewitching; and the delicacy she displayed on this
occasion went so far that she “could not even intercede
with the dean to forgive his nephew, because the topic was too
gross for her lips to name even in the ear of her
husband.”</p>
<p>Miss Sedgeley, though on the very eve of her bridal day with
William, felt so tender a regard for Henry, that often she
thought Rebecca happier in disgrace and poverty, blest with the
love of him, than she was likely to be in the possession of
friends and fortune with his cousin.</p>
<p>Had Henry been of a nature to suspect others of evil, or had
he felt a confidence in his own worth, such a passion as this
young woman’s would soon have disclosed its existence: but
he, regardless of any attractions of Miss Sedgeley, equally
supposed he had none in her eyes; and thus, fortunately for the
peace of all parties, this prepossession ever remained a secret
except to herself.</p>
<p>So little did William conceive that his clownish cousin could
rival him in the affections of a woman of fashion, that he even
slightly solicited his father “that Henry might not be
banished from the house, at least till after the following day,
when the great festival of his marriage was to be
celebrated.”</p>
<p>But the dean refused, and reminded his son, “that he was
bound both by his moral and religious character, in the eyes of
God, and still more, in the eyes of men, to show lasting
resentment of iniquity like his.”</p>
<p>William acquiesced, and immediately delivered to his cousin
the dean’s “wishes for his amendment,” and a
letter of recommendation procured from Lord Bendham, to introduce
him on board a man-of-war; where, he was told, “he might
hope to meet with preferment, according to his merit, as a sailor
and a gentleman.”</p>
<p>Henry pressed William’s hand on parting, wished him
happy in his marriage, and supplicated, as the only favour he
would implore, an interview with his uncle, to thank him for all
his former kindness, and to see him for the last time.</p>
<p>William repeated this petition to his father, but with so
little energy, that the dean did not grant it. He felt
himself, he said, compelled to resent that reprobate character in
which Henry had appeared; and he feared “lest the
remembrance of his last parting from his brother might, on taking
a formal leave of that brother’s son, reduce him to some
tokens of weakness, that would ill become his dignity and just
displeasure.”</p>
<p>He sent him his blessing, with money to convey him to the
ship, and Henry quitted his uncle’s house in a flood of
tears, to seek first a new protectress for his little foundling,
and then to seek his fortune.</p>
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