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The tender-hearted Henrietta, in returning to her new friends, gave ith artless openness, to the violence of unta Mr Arnott as wretched as herself, the sympathy Cecilia had foreseen soon endeared them to each other, while the little interest taken in either by Mrs Harrel, made them almost inseparable companions
Mrs Harrel, wearied by their melancholy, and sick of retirement, took the earliest opportunity that was offered her of changing her situation; she hbourhood, and, quickly forgetting all the past, thoughtlessly began the world again, with new hopes, new connections,--new equipages and new engageain to her encies to which she was now become familiar, she was not more hurt by the separation than Mr Arnott So sad and so solitary his house seemed in her absence, that he soon followed her to town, and returned not till he carried her back its ratitude of her soft and feeling heart, engaged from the worthy Mr Arnott the tenderest affection, and, in time, healed the wound of his early and hopeless passion
The injudicious, the volatile, yet noble- disposition life seeressive, roved from employment to employment, and from public life to retirement, soured with the world, and discontented with hith, by the constant friendship of Delvile, he consented to accept his good offices in again entering the arn service, his hopes were revived by ahtened by a view of future honour
The wretched Monckton, dupe of his own cunning and artifices, still lived in lingering misery, doubtful which was most acute, the pain of his wound and confinement, or of his defeat and disappointment Led on by a vain belief that he had parts to conquer all difficulties, he had indulged without restraint a passion in which interest was seconded by inclination Allured by such fascinating powers, he shortly suffered nothing to stop his course; and though when he began his career he would have started at thebefore it was concluded, neither treachery nor perjury were regarded by hi was lost in vanity, all sense of probity was sunk in interest, all scruples of conscience were left behind by the heat of the chace Yet the unforeseen andarts, illustrated in his despite what his principles had obscured, that even in worldly pursuits where fraud out-runs integrity, failure joins dishonour to loss, and disappointment excites triumph instead of pity