I will follow the servant in two hours; I shall be at Rose-hill by eight o’clock.
Adieu! my dearest Emily!
Your faithful
Ed. Rivers.
LETTER CLXXXVIII.192.
To John Temple, Esq; Temple-house, Rutland.
Sept. 21, Nine at night.
The loveliest of women has consented to make me happy: she remonstrated, she doubted; but her tenderness conquered all her reluctance. To-morrow I shall call her mine.
We shall set out immediately for your house, where we hope to be the next day to dinner: you will therefore postpone your journey to town a week, at the end of which we intend going to Bellfield. Captain Fermor and Mrs. Fitzgerald accompany us down. Emily’s relation, Mrs. H——, has business which prevents her; and Fitzgerald is obliged to stay another month in town, to transact the affair of his majority.
Never did Emily look so lovely as this evening: there is a sweet confusion, mixed with tenderness, in her whole look and manner, which is charming beyond all expression.
Adieu! I have not a moment to spare: even this absence from her is treason to love. Say every thing for me to my mother and Lucy.
Yours,
Ed. Rivers.