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-to expose them, was to risk them: where there is risk, there may be loss :-and what wilt thou have, Yorick! to answer a heart so full of trust and confidence-so good, so gentle, and unreproaching!

-I will not go to Brussels, replied I, interrupting myself-but my imagination went on-I recalled her looks at that crisis of our separation, when neither of us had power to say adieu ! I look'd at the picture she had tied in a black ribband about my neck and blush'd as I look'd at it-I would have given the world to have kiss'd it but was ashamed -and shall this tender flower, said I, pressing it between my hands-shall it be smitten to its very root-and smitten, Yorick! by thee, who hast promised to shelter it in thy breast ?

Eternal fountain of happiness! said I, kneeling down upon the ground-be thou my witnessand every pure spirit which tastes it, be my witness also, That I would not travel to Brussels, unless Eliza went along with me, did the road lead me towards heaven.

In transports of this kind, the heart, in spite of the understanding, will always say too much.

F

THE LETTER

AMIENS

ORTUNE had not smiled upon La Fleur; for he had been unsuccessful in his feats of

chivalry and not one thing had offered to signalize his zeal for my service from the time he had entered into it, which was almost four-andtwenty hours. The poor soul burn'd with impatience; and the Count de L***'s servant coming with the letter, being the first practicable occasion which offered, La Fleur had laid hold of it; and in order to do honour to his master, had taken him into a back parlour in the Auberge, and treated him with a cup or two of the best wine in Picardy; and the Count de L***'s servant, in return, and not to be behind-hand in politeness with La Fleur, had taken him back with him to the Count's hotel. La Fleur's prevenancy (for there was a passport in his very looks) soon set every servant in the kitchen at ease with him; and as a Frenchman, whatever be his talents, has no sort of prudery in showing them, La Fleur, in less than five minutes, had pulled out his fife, and leading off the dance himself with the first note, set the fille de chambre, the maitre d'hotel, the cook, the scullion, and all the household, dogs and cats, besides an old monkey, a-dancing: I suppose there never was a merrier kitchen since the flood.

Madame de L***, in passing from her brother's apartments to her own, hearing so much jollity below stairs, rung up her fille de chambre to ask about it; and hearing it was the English gentleman's servant who had set the whole house merry with his pipe, she ordered him up.

As the poor fellow could not present himself empty, he had loaden'd himself in going up stairs with a thousand compliments to Madame de L***, on the part of his master-added a long apocrypha of enquiries after Madame de L's health-told her, that Monsieur his master was au desespoire for her re-establishment from the fatigues of her journeyand, to close all, that Monsieur had received the letter which Madame had done him the honour -And he has done me the honour, said Madame de L, interrupting La Fleur, to send a billet in return.

Madame de L had said this with such a tone of reliance upon the fact, that La Fleur had not power to disappoint her expectations - he trembled for my honour and possibly might not altogether be unconcerned for his own, as a man capable of being attached to a master who could be wanting en egards vis à vis d'une femme! so that when Madame de L asked La Fleur if he had brought a letter-O qu'oui, said La Fleur; so laying down his hat upon the ground, and taking hold of the flap of his right-side pocket with his left-hand, he began to search for the letter with his right-then contrary-wise. Diable! - then sought every pocket, pocket by pocket, round, not forgetting his fobPeste ! then La Fleur emptied them upon the floor -pulled out a dirty cravata handkerchief-a comb-a whip-lash-a night-cap-then gave a peep into his hat-Quelle etourderie! He had left the letter upon the table in the Auberge he would run for it, and be back with it in three minutes.

I had just finished my supper when La Fleur came in to give me an account of his adventure : he told me the whole story simply as it was; and only added, that if Monsieur had forgot (par hazard) to answer Madame's letter, the arrangement gave him an opportunity to recover the faux pasand if not, that things were only as they were.

Now I was not altogether sure of my etiquette, whether I ought to have wrote or no; but if I had -a devil himself could not have been angry. 'Twas but the officious zeal of a well-meaning creature for my honour; and however he might have mistook the road, or embarrassed me in so doing his heart was in no fault-I was under no necessity to write -and what weighed more than all-he did not look as if he had done amiss.

-'Tis all very well, La Fleur, said I-'Twas sufficient. La Fleur flew out of the room like lightning, and return'd with pen, ink, and paper, in his hand; and coming up to the table, laid them close before me, with such a delight in his countenance, that I could not help taking up the pen.

I begun and begun again; and though I had nothing to say, and that nothing might have been expressed in half a dozen lines, I made half a dozen different beginnings, and could no way please myself. In short, I was in no mood to write.

La Fleur stepp'd out and brought a little water in a glass to dilute my ink-then fetched sand and seal-wax-It was all one; I wrote, and blotted, and tore off, and burnt, and wrote again-Le diable l'emporte, said I half to myself-I cannot write this self-same letter; throwing the pen down despairingly as I said it.

As soon as I had cast down the pen, La Fleur advanced with the most respectful carriage up to the table, and making a thousand apologies for the liberty he was going to take, told me he had a letter in his pocket wrote by a drummer in his regiment to a corporal's wife, which, he durst say, would suit the

occasion.

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