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<h2> CHAPTER XXXII. </h2>
<h3> REASONS WHY AND WHEREFORE. </h3>
<p>THE reader of sensibility may perhaps be astonished to find Mrs. Crayton
could so positively deny any knowledge of Charlotte; it is therefore but
just that her conduct should in some measure be accounted for. She had
ever been fully sensible of the superiority of Charlotte's sense and
virtue; she was conscious that she had never swerved from rectitude, had
it not been for her bad precepts and worse example. These were things as
yet unknown to her husband, and she wished not to have that part of her
conduct exposed to him, as she had great reason to fear she had already
lost considerable part of that power she once maintained over him. She
trembled whilst Charlotte was in the house, lest the Colonel should
return; she perfectly well remembered how much he seemed interested in her
favour whilst on their passage from England, and made no doubt, but,
should he see her in her present distress, he would offer her an asylum,
and protect her to the utmost of his power. In that case she feared the
unguarded nature of Charlotte might discover to the Colonel the part she
had taken in the unhappy girl's elopement, and she well knew the contrast
between her own and Charlotte's conduct would make the former appear in no
very respectable light. Had she reflected properly, she would have
afforded the poor girl protection; and by enjoining her silence, ensured
it by acts of repeated kindness; but vice in general blinds its votaries,
and they discover their real characters to the world when they are most
studious to preserve appearances.</p>
<p>Just so it happened with Mrs. Crayton: her servants made no scruple of
mentioning the cruel conduct of their lady to a poor distressed lunatic
who claimed her protection; every one joined in reprobating her
inhumanity; nay even Corydon thought she might at least have ordered her
to be taken care of, but he dare not even hint it to her, for he lived but
in her smiles, and drew from her lavish fondness large sums to support an
extravagance to which the state of his own finances was very inadequate;
it cannot therefore be supposed that he wished Mrs. Crayton to be very
liberal in her bounty to the afflicted suppliant; yet vice had not so
entirely seared over his heart, but the sorrows of Charlotte could find a
vulnerable part.</p>
<p>Charlotte had now been three days with her humane preservers, but she was
totally insensible of every thing: she raved incessantly for Montraville
and her father: she was not conscious of being a mother, nor took the
least notice of her child except to ask whose it was, and why it was not
carried to its parents.</p>
<p>"Oh," said she one day, starting up on hearing the infant cry, "why, why
will you keep that child here; I am sure you would not if you knew how
hard it was for a mother to be parted from her infant: it is like tearing
the cords of life asunder. Oh could you see the horrid sight which I now
behold—there there stands my dear mother, her poor bosom bleeding at
every vein, her gentle, affectionate heart torn in a thousand pieces, and
all for the loss of a ruined, ungrateful child. Save me save me—from
her frown. I dare not—indeed I dare not speak to her."</p>
<p>Such were the dreadful images that haunted her distracted mind, and nature
was sinking fast under the dreadful malady which medicine had no power to
remove. The surgeon who attended her was a humane man; he exerted his
utmost abilities to save her, but he saw she was in want of many
necessaries and comforts, which the poverty of her hospitable host
rendered him unable to provide: he therefore determined to make her
situation known to some of the officers' ladies, and endeavour to make a
collection for her relief.</p>
<p>When he returned home, after making this resolution, he found a message
from Mrs. Beauchamp, who had just arrived from Rhode-Island, requesting he
would call and see one of her children, who was very unwell. "I do not
know," said he, as he was hastening to obey the summons, "I do not know a
woman to whom I could apply with more hope of success than Mrs. Beauchamp.
I will endeavour to interest her in this poor girl's behalf, she wants the
soothing balm of friendly consolation: we may perhaps save her; we will
try at least."</p>
<p>"And where is she," cried Mrs. Beauchamp when he had prescribed something
for the child, and told his little pathetic tale, "where is she, Sir? we
will go to her immediately. Heaven forbid that I should be deaf to the
calls of humanity. Come we will go this instant." Then seizing the
doctor's arm, they sought the habitation that contained the dying
Charlotte.</p>
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