| 30. LADY SUSAN VERNON TO MR. DE COURCY Upper Seymour Street.
 
 I have received your letter, and though I do not attempt to conceal that
 I am gratified by your impatience for the hour of meeting, I yet feel
 myself under the necessity of delaying that hour beyond the time originally
 fixed. Do not think me unkind for such an exercise of my power, nor accuse
 me of instability without first hearing my reasons. In the course of my
 journey from Churchhill I had ample leisure for reflection on the present
 state of our affairs, and every review has served to convince me that they
 require a delicacy and cautiousness of conduct to which we have hitherto
 been too little attentive. We have been hurried on by our feelings to a
 degree of precipitation which ill accords with the claims of our friends or
 the opinion of the world. We have been unguarded in forming this hasty
 engagement, but we must not complete the imprudence by ratifying it while
 there is so much reason to fear the connection would be opposed by those
 friends on whom you depend. It is not for us to blame any expectations on
 your father's side of your marrying to advantage; where possessions are so
 extensive as those of your family, the wish of increasing them, if not
 strictly reasonable, is too common to excite surprize or resentment. He has
 a right to require a woman of fortune in his daughter-in-law, and I am
 sometimes quarrelling with myself for suffering you to form a connection so
 imprudent; but the influence of reason is often acknowledged too late by
 those who feel like me. I have now been but a few months a widow, and,
 however little indebted to my husband's memory for any happiness derived
 from him during a union of some years, I cannot forget that the indelicacy
 of so early a second marriage must subject me to the censure of the world,
 and incur, what would be still more insupportable, the displeasure of Mr.
 Vernon. I might perhaps harden myself in time against the injustice of
 general reproach, but the loss of HIS valued esteem I am, as you well know,
 ill-fitted to endure; and when to this may be added the consciousness of
 having injured you with your family, how am I to support myself? With
 feelings so poignant as mine, the conviction of having divided the son from
 his parents would make me, even with you, the most miserable of beings. It
 will surely, therefore, be advisable to delay our union--to delay it till
 appearances are more promising--till affairs have taken a more favourable
 turn. To assist us In such a resolution I feel that absence will be
 necessary. We must not meet. Cruel as this sentence may appear, the
 necessity of pronouncing it, which can alone reconcile it to myself, will
 be evident to you when you have considered our situation in the light in
 which I have found myself imperiously obliged to place it. You may be--you
 must be--well assured that nothing but the strongest conviction of duty
 could induce me to wound my own feelings by urging a lengthened separation,
 and of insensibility to yours you will hardly suspect me. Again, therefore,
 I say that we ought not, we must not, yet meet. By a removal for some
 months from each other we shall tranquillise the sisterly fears of Mrs.
 Vernon, who, accustomed herself to the enjoyment of riches, considers
 fortune as necessary everywhere, and whose sensibilities are not of a
 nature to comprehend ours. Let me hear from you soon--very soon. Tell me
 that you submit to my arguments, and do not reproach me for using such. I
 cannot bear reproaches: my spirits are not so high as to need being
 repressed. I must endeavour to seek amusement, and fortunately many of my
 friends are in town; amongst them the Mainwarings; you know how sincerely
 I regard both husband and wife.
 
 I am, very faithfully yours,
 
 S. VERNON
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