good understanding;
if she does this to you, it is a great deal more than I ever hear myself, for the one or the other is always found fault with, and I am told to copy the
excellent pattern
which I see before me in
herself.
You have got an invitation too, you may accept it if you please, but if you value your own comfort, and like a pleasant situation, I advise you to avoid Southwell. — I thank you, My dear Augusta, for your readiness to assist me, and will in some manner avail myself of it; I do not however wish to be separated from
her
entirely, but not to be so much with her as I hitherto have been, for I do believe she likes me; she manifests that in many instances, particularly with regard to money, which I never want, and have as much as I desire. But her conduct is so strange, her caprices so impossible to be complied with, her passions so outrageous, that the evil quite overbalances her
agreeable qualities.
Amongst other things I forgot to mention a most