CHAPTER XXXI.
SUBJECT CONTINUED.
[31.1]
When the door was opened,
[31.2]
"Take up this letter," said
[31.3]
"A letter, Madam,"
said he, presenting it to his lady: "an immediate answer is required."
[31.4]
Mrs. Crayton glanced her eye carelessly over the contents.
"What stuff is this;" cried she haughtily; "have not I told you a thousand times
that I will not be plagued with beggars, and
petitions from people one knows nothing
about? Go tell the woman I can't do any thing in it. I'm sorry, but one
can't relieve every body."
[31.5]
The servant bowed, and heavily returned with this chilling
message to
[31.6]
"Surely," said she, "Mrs. Crayton has not read my letter.
Go, my good friend, pray go back to her;
tell her it is Charlotte Temple who requests beneath her hospitable roof to
find shelter from the inclemency of the season."
[31.7]
"Prithee, don't plague me, man," cried Mrs. Crayton
impatiently, as the servant advanced something in behalf of the unhappy girl.
"I tell you I don't know her."
[31.8]
"Not know me," cried
Charlotte, rushing into the room, (for she had followed the man up stairs) "not
know me, not remember the ruined Charlotte Temple, who, but for you, perhaps
might still have been innocent, still have been happy. Oh! La Rue, this is
beyond every thing I could have believed possible."
[31.9]
"Upon my honor, Miss," replied the
unfeeling woman with the utmost
effrontery, "this is a most unaccountable address: it is beyond my
comprehension. John," continued she, turning to the servant, "the young woman is
certainly out of her senses: do pray take her away, she terrifies me to death."
[31.10]
"Oh God," cried
[31.11]
"I can at least die here," said
[31.12]
"Take her away,"
said Mrs. Crayton, "she will really frighten me into hysterics; take her away I
say this instant."
[31.13]
"And where must I take the poor creature?" said
the servant with a
voice and look of compassion.
[31.14]
"Anywhere," cried
she hastily, "only don't let me ever see her again. I declare she has flurried
[flustered]
me so I shan't be
myself again this fortnight
[14 nights = 2 weeks]." [31.15] John, assisted by his fellow-servant, raised and carried her down stairs. "Poor soul," said he, "you shall not lay in the street this night. I have a bed and a poor little hovel [cabin], where my wife and her little ones rest them, but they shall watch to night, and you shall be sheltered from danger." They placed her in a chair; and the benevolent man, assisted by one of his comrades, carried her to the place where his wife and children lived. A surgeon was sent for: he bled her, she gave signs of returning life, and before the dawn gave birth to a female infant. After this event she lay for some hours in a kind of stupor; and if at any time she spoke, it was with a quickness and incoherence that plainly evinced the total deprivation of her reason.
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