Clarissa Harlowe by Samuel Richardson (e reader manga .txt) π
Description
Clarissa Harlowe, or The History of a Young Lady is one of the longest novels in the English language. Written by Samuel Richardson over a period of several years and published in 1748, it is composed entirely of letters. Though this may seem daunting, the novel is highly regarded and is considered by many critics as one of the greatest works of English literature, appearing in several lists of the best British novels ever written.
The novel tells the story of young Clarissa, eighteen years of age at the start of the novel. She is generally regarded by her family, neighbors, and friends as the most virtuous and kind young woman they know. But she is drawn into correspondence with Richard Lovelace, a well-born, rich young man regarded as something of a rake, when she attempts to reconcile a dispute between Lovelace and her rash brother. Lovelace, imagining this indicates her love for him, carries out a series of strategems which result in him essentially abducting her from her family, from whom Clarissa then becomes estranged.
Much of the correspondence consists of the letters between Clarissa and her close friend Anna Howe, and between Lovelace and his friend Jack Belford, to whom he confesses all of his strategems and βinventionsβ in his assault on Clarissaβs honor.
The novel is thus a fascinating study of human nature. Much of Lovelaceβs actions and attitudes towards women are regrettably only too familiar to modern readers. And while Clarissa herself may be a little too good to be true, nevertheless she is shown as having some flaws which lead to a tragic outcome.
This Standard Ebooks edition is based on the 9-volume Chapman and Hall edition of 1902.
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- Author: Samuel Richardson
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Do you expect any voluntary favour from one to whom you give not a free choice?
Do you intend, Madam, to honour me with your hand, in your uncleβs presence, or do you not?
My heart and my hand shall never be separated. Why, think you, did I stand in opposition to the will of my best, my natural friends.
I know what you mean, Madamβ βAm I then as hateful to you as the vile Solmes?
Ask me not such a question, Mr. Lovelace.
I must be answered. Am I as hateful to you as the vile Solmes?
Why do you call Mr. Solmes vile?
Donβt you think him so, Madam?
Why should I? Did Mr. Solmes ever do vilely by me?
Dearest creature! donβt distract me by hateful comparisons! and perhaps by a more hateful preference.
Donβt you, Sir, put questions to me that you know I will answer truly, though my answer were ever so much to enrage you.
My heart, Madam, my soul is all yours at present. But you must give me hope, that your promise, in your own construction, binds you, no new cause to the contrary, to be mine on Thursday. How else can I leave you?
Let me go to Hampstead; and trust to my favour.
May I trust to it?β βSay only may I trust to it?
How will you trust to it, if you extort an answer to this question?
Say only, dearest creature, say only, may I trust to your favour, if you go to Hampstead?
How dare you, Sir, if I must speak out, expect a promise of favour from me?β βWhat a mean creature must you think me, after the ungrateful baseness to me, were I to give you such a promise?
Then standing up, Thou hast made me, O vilest of men! (her hands clasped, and a face crimsoned with indignation), an inmate of the vilest of housesβ βnevertheless, while I am in it, I shall have a heart incapable of anything but abhorrence of that and of thee!
And round her looked the angel, and upon me, with fear in her sweet aspect of the consequence of her free declarationβ βBut what a devil must I have been, I who love bravery in a man, had I not been more struck with admiration of her fortitude at the instant, than stimulated by revenge?
Noblest of creatures!β βAnd do you think I can leave you, and my interest in such an excellence, precarious? No promise!β βno hope!β βIf you make me not desperate, may lightning blast me, if I do you not all the justice βtis in my power to do you!
If you have any intention to oblige me, leave me at my own liberty, and let me not be detained in this abominable house. To be constrained as I have been constrained! to be stopped by your vile agents! to be brought up by force, and be bruised in my own defence against such illegal violence!β βI dare to die, Lovelaceβ βand she who fears not death, is not to be intimidated into a meanness unworthy of her heart and principles!
Wonderful creature! But why, Madam, did you lead me to hope for something favourable for next Thursday?β βOnce more, make me not desperateβ βWith all your magnanimity, glorious creature! (I was more than half frantic, Belford), you may, you mayβ βbut do not, do not make me brutally threaten youβ βdo not, do not make me desperate!
My aspect, I believe, threatened still more than my words. I was risingβ βShe roseβ βMr. Lovelace, be pacifiedβ βyou are even more dreadful than the Lovelace I have long dreadedβ βlet me retireβ βI ask your leave to retireβ βyou really frighten meβ βyet I give you no hopeβ βfrom my heart I abβ β
Say not, Madam, you abhor me. You must, for your own sake, conceal your hatredβ βat least not avow it. I seized her hand.
Let me retireβ βlet me, retire, said she, in a manner out of breath.
I will only say, Madam, that I refer myself to your generosity. My heart is not to be trusted at this instant. As a mark of my submission to your will, you shall, if you please, withdrawβ βbut I will not go to M. Hallβ βlive or die my Lord M. I will not go to M. Hallβ βbut will attend the effect of your promise. Remember, Madam, you have promised to endeavour to make yourself easy till you see the event of next Thursdayβ βnext Thursday, remember, your uncle comes up, to see us marriedβ βthatβs the event.β βYou think ill of your Lovelaceβ βdo not, Madam, suffer your own morals to be degraded by the infection, as you called it, of his example.
Away flew the charmer with this half permissionβ βand no doubt thought that she had an escapeβ βnor without reason.
I knew not for half an hour what to do with myself. Vexed at the heart, nevertheless, (now she was from me, and when I reflected upon her hatred of me, and her defiances), that I suffered myself to be so overawed, checked, restrainedβ β
And now I have written thus far, (have of course recollected the whole of our conversation), I am more and more incensed against myself.
But I will go down to these womenβ βand perhaps suffer myself to be laughed at by them.
Devil fetch them, they pretend to know their own sex. Sally was a woman well educatedβ βPolly alsoβ βboth have readβ βboth have senseβ βof parentage not meanβ βonce modest bothβ βstill, they say, had been modest, but for meβ βnot entirely indelicate now; though too little nice for my personal intimacy, loth as they both are to have me think soβ βthe old one, too, a woman of family, though thus (from bad inclination as well as at first from low circumstances) miserably sunk:β βand hence they all pretend to remember what once they were; and vouch for the inclinations and hypocrisy of the whole sex, and wish for nothing so ardently, as that I will leave the perverse lady to their management while I am gone to Berkshire; undertaking absolutely for her humility and passiveness on my return; and continually boasting of the many perverse creatures whom they have obliged to draw in their traces.
I am just come from the sorceresses.
I was forced
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