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<h2> CHAPTER XXXV. </h2>
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<h2> CONCLUSION. </h2>
<p>SHORTLY after the interment of his daughter, Mr. Temple, with his dear
little charge and her nurse, set forward for England. It would be
impossible to do justice to the meeting scene between him, his Lucy, and
her aged father. Every heart of sensibility can easily conceive their
feelings. After the first tumult of grief was subsided, Mrs. Temple gave
up the chief of her time to her grand-child, and as she grew up and
improved, began to almost fancy she again possessed her Charlotte.</p>
<p>It was about ten years after these painful events, that Mr. and Mrs.
Temple, having buried their father, were obliged to come to London on
particular business, and brought the little Lucy with them. They had been
walking one evening, when on their return they found a poor wretch sitting
on the steps of the door. She attempted to rise as they approached, but
from extreme weakness was unable, and after several fruitless efforts fell
back in a fit. Mr. Temple was not one of those men who stand to consider
whether by assisting an object in distress they shall not inconvenience
themselves, but instigated by the impulse of a noble feeling heart,
immediately ordered her to be carried into the house, and proper
restoratives applied.</p>
<p>She soon recovered; and fixing her eyes on Mrs. Temple, cried—"You
know not, Madam, what you do; you know not whom you are relieving, or you
would curse me in the bitterness of your heart. Come not near me, Madam, I
shall contaminate you. I am the viper that stung your peace. I am the
woman who turned the poor Charlotte out to perish in the street. Heaven
have mercy! I see her now," continued she looking at Lucy; "such, such was
the fair bud of innocence that my vile arts blasted ere it was half
blown."</p>
<p>It was in vain that Mr. and Mrs. Temple intreated her to be composed and
to take some refreshment. She only drank half a glass of wine; and then
told them that she had been separated from her husband seven years, the
chief of which she had passed in riot, dissipation, and vice, till,
overtaken by poverty and sickness, she had been reduced to part with every
valuable, and thought only of ending her life in a prison; when a
benevolent friend paid her debts and released her; but that her illness
increasing, she had no possible means of supporting herself, and her
friends were weary of relieving her. "I have fasted," said she, "two days,
and last night lay my aching head on the cold pavement: indeed it was but
just that I should experience those miseries myself which I had
unfeelingly inflicted on others."</p>
<p>Greatly as Mr. Temple had reason to detest Mrs. Crayton, he could not
behold her in this distress without some emotions of pity. He gave her
shelter that night beneath his hospitable roof, and the next day got her
admission into an hospital; where having lingered a few weeks, she died, a
striking example that vice, however prosperous in the beginning, in the
end leads only to misery and shame.</p>
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