We must now take leave of Arcadia, and those amiable people practising

the rural virtues there, and travel back to London, to inquire what has

become of Miss Amelia "We don't care a fig for her," writes some

unknown correspondent with a pretty little handwriting and a pink seal

to her note. "She is fade and insipid," and adds some more kind

remarks in this strain, which I should never have repeated at all, but

that they are in truth prodigiously complimentary to the young lady

whom they concern.

Has the beloved reader, in his experience of society, never heard

similar remarks by good-natured female friends; who always wonder what

you CAN see in Miss Smith that is so fascinating; or what COULD induce

Major Jones to propose for that silly insignificant simpering Miss

Thompson, who has nothing but her wax-doll face to recommend her? What

is there in a pair of pink cheeks and blue eyes forsooth? these dear

Moralists ask, and hint wisely that the gifts of genius, the

accomplishments of the mind, the mastery of Mangnall's Questions, and a

ladylike knowledge of botany and geology, the knack of making poetry,

the power of rattling sonatas in the Herz-manner, and so forth, are far

more valuable endowments for a female, than those fugitive charms which

a few years will inevitably tarnish. It is quite edifying to hear

women speculate upon the worthlessness and the duration of beauty.

But though virtue is a much finer thing, and those hapless creatures

who suffer under the misfortune of good looks ought to be continually

put in mind of the fate which awaits them; and though, very likely, the

heroic female character which ladies admire is a more glorious and

beautiful object than the kind, fresh, smiling, artless, tender little

domestic goddess, whom men are inclined to worship--yet the latter and

inferior sort of women must have this consolation--that the men do

admire them after all; and that, in spite of all our kind friends'

warnings and protests, we go on in our desperate error and folly, and

shall to the end of the chapter. Indeed, for my own part, though I have

been repeatedly told by persons for whom I have the greatest respect,

that Miss Brown is an insignificant chit, and Mrs. White has nothing

but her petit minois chiffonne, and Mrs. Black has not a word to say

for herself; yet I know that I have had the most delightful

conversations with Mrs. Black (of course, my dear Madam, they are

inviolable): I see all the men in a cluster round Mrs. White's chair:

all the young fellows battling to dance with Miss Brown; and so I am

tempted to think that to be despised by her sex is a very great

compliment to a woman.

The young ladies in Amelia's society did this for her very

satisfactorily. For instance, there was scarcely any point upon which

the Misses Osborne, George's sisters, and the Mesdemoiselles Dobbin

agreed so well as in their estimate of her very trifling merits: and

their wonder that their brothers could find any charms in her. "We are

kind to her," the Misses Osborne said, a pair of fine black-browed

young ladies who had had the best of governesses, masters, and

milliners; and they treated her with such extreme kindness and

condescension, and patronised her so insufferably, that the poor little

thing was in fact perfectly dumb in their presence, and to all outward

appearance as stupid as they thought her. She made efforts to like

them, as in duty bound, and as sisters of her future husband. She

passed "long mornings" with them--the most dreary and serious of

forenoons. She drove out solemnly in their great family coach with

them, and Miss Wirt their governess, that raw-boned Vestal. They took

her to the ancient concerts by way of a treat, and to the oratorio, and

to St. Paul's to see the charity children, where in such terror was she

of her friends, she almost did not dare be affected by the hymn the

children sang. Their house was comfortable; their papa's table rich

and handsome; their society solemn and genteel; their self-respect

prodigious; they had the best pew at the Foundling: all their habits

were pompous and orderly, and all their amusements intolerably dull and

decorous. After every one of her visits (and oh how glad she was when

they were over!) Miss Osborne and Miss Maria Osborne, and Miss Wirt,

the vestal governess, asked each other with increased wonder, "What

could George find in that creature?"




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