[81] Cozens is here very happy, very solitary and almost as full of 
            Systems as the Universe  Since I left London I have heard no 
            more of a certain beauteous personage whose incursion filled us mutually 
            with alarms.  Continue to be firm and resolute but above all 
            things take a resolution of being at Fonthill the 28th of September 
            and celebrating with us the Vigil of the Goose day. 
            Fonthill Augt 15 1781.
          Mrs 
            B.d
            
            Your Letter of the 6th March, my dear Louisa, found me absorbed in 
            Musick  bent over my instrument and dissolved in Tears. I had 
            just received a few Lines from my dearest Friend, and was recalling 
            to my mind the tranquil hours we had passed together  Shall 
            I ever be again so fortunate, must I bid an eternal farewell to those 
            enchanting moments!  Will he lose that amiable childishness? 
            we doat upon?  No  I flatter myself he will not; his Letters 
            breathe its genuine spirit and are tinted with our own beloved melancholy 
             Adieu remember next Summer  we shall be whafted to Hesperia 
            and enjoy its fables and Sunshine.  Write me an answer immediately 
            however short. 
            [82] In a month we shall probably meet  what consolation there 
            is in that idea  Good night  I will dwell upon it. 
            Paris Wednesday March 14th 1781  10 o Clock Eve. 
            
           
            Mr Cozens Fonthill 9 at Night De 24th 1779
            
            Since the receipt of your last Letter I have not looked upon the Egyptian 
            Hall with the same pleasure as before or enjoyed the glow of the Central 
            Fire. What are the Indian Apartments to me now I am assured you cannot 
            view them.  You would pity me could some Spirit transport you 
            to this solitary Chamber where I lie stretched on the Carpets  
            pining after my absent Wm. 
            The animated trivets & footstools that amble around me put me 
            out of all patience. Last Night, tired with their impertinencies I 
            stole from the Saloon & led by a glimpse of moonshine between 
            the Arches of the Egyptian Hall, went out at the Southern Portal. 
            The [83] dissolution of the Snows next the pavement had left round 
            it a cricle of verdure, beyond which all was whiteness & grey 
            mist that rising from the waters & spreading over the Lawn, seemed 
            to inclose the peaceful Palace on every side. Thro the medium 
            of these vapours the Moon cast a dim blueish light just sufficient 
            to discover the surrounding Woods changed into Groves of Coral. I 
            was so charmed with the novelty of the prospect that setting the cold 
            at deffiance I walked to & fro on the plat form for several minutes, 
            fancying the fictions of Romance realized & almost imagining myself 
            surrounded by some wondrous misty barrier no Frengui could penetrate. 
            How I wished for my dear W.m to share with me this imaginary; but 
            delightful confinement! 
          Mrs 
            B.d Naples July 9th 1782
            
            I wait for your Letters with trembling expectation The last from ..... 
            thrilled every nerve in my frame. My state is if possible more abject 
            than ever. The Sea breezes blow in vain, [84] in vain the beautiful 
            prospects of the Bay present themselves, the transparent sky is spread 
            over my head to no purpose. I should droop in the Garden of Eden were 
            you & my lovely Angel banished from my sight.
            Your Pictures are continually before me no words can describe the 
            fond delight with which I hang over them. You, if any Mortal is able, 
            may explain to  the sensations which make my heart 
            ready to swell out of my bosom. I shall believe you another time Louisa. 
            You told me I should relabse again into all my weakness. Forgive my 
            presumption. I will never pretend to lift up my head. O that I could 
            feel my neck pressed by the little ivory feet of ...... Tell her all 
            my follies upon her account & let me know if she is glad I am 
            her Slave. Have you seen her since the 9th June? Has she talked to 
            you any more of her W.m I must cease writing, for the present. My 
            head swims.  The Room whirls round, the Sea I am looking upon, 
            seems in my fascinated Eyes to assume a thousand fantastic colours. 
            Strange Islands [85] appear rising from the Waves.  Pity me 
            Louisa.  Sustain me for Gods sake.  Send to ...... 
            write to her, remind her of him who to lay one more night on her soft 
            bosom would cast himself on thorns of Iron. 
          Evian 
            Aug.st 26th 1783
            
            My friend what can have prevented your writing to me. Do you imagine 
            that I am grown insensible to your regard & that I am dead to 
            our world of Ideas. You are quite mistaken. I am what I have ever 
            been. The woods, the mountains, the wild flowery hills have not ceased 
            to appear delightful in my eyes.  I am not lost; but restored 
            to myself.  The consciousness of a secure tranquil happiness 
            has recalled those sportive fancies which were wont to form our dearest 
            amusements. I can give myself up to dreams of India and antient times 
            without fearing to wake with a dreadful start to misery and agitation. 
            I shall return happy & contented with a Companion I love & 
            who loves every thing that amuses me. You, of all others, may [86] 
            reckon upon her affection, for she knows how long & how sincerely 
            you have been my Friend. Farewell  convince me, by writing immediately 
            that you likewise are what you have been. 
          Mr Henley 
            Padua Thursday June 13th 1782
            
            It is from the Land of Senegal I believe that I send my Letter. The 
            Sun is fiercer than you can conceive and the Sky without a Cloud. 
            All Padua are celebrating the festival of their blessed S.t Anthony, 
            whose vast Church indeed is the only place that can cool a parched 
            up Traveller. I have been sitting in a solemn Aile the whole morning, 
            listening to the Choir & viewing the distant Crowd prostrate before 
            the high Altar round which a multitude of tapers kept continually 
            moving. Not seeing the Priests who bore them, they seemed like floating 
            exhalations. Affected by the plaintif tones of the Voices & Instruments 
            I grew very devout and melancholy, sometimes lifting up my Eyes to 
            the Shrine; but oftener fixing [87] them on the pavement. St Anthony 
            reposes under a beautiful Arcade of the richest marble crowded with 
            sculptures that would not have disgraced an Athenian temple & 
            gleaming with polished friezes & bas reliefs of gold.
            From the Arches of this holy place depend several hundred silver lamps 
            whose flames are never suffered to decay. The confusion of Lights, 
            of votive tablets, of Steps, of Candelabrum and pillars form altogether 
            an appearance not unlike those wildly magnificent fabrics I sometimes 
            visit in my dreams. 
          June 
            18th
            
            I have just received a pacquet from England but no Letters from you. 
            Has the Hill fallen upon your head, or has Hamilton scratched your 
            eyes out? I long to be told how we go on ........ I am far advanced 
            in a strange Letter for the conclusion, nay it would have been finished 
            had not the remainder of my Arabian M.S. arrived from old Lamir
            Tomorrow I proceed to Rome, in deffiance of the Sun & the Sirrocco 
            in a fortnight I hope to expatiate on the cool shores of Parthenope 
            and be sirenized every evening. Let me hear from you very often & 
            dont forget yr siny aff
            WB.
          [88] 
            Mr Lettice at Highwood Hill Fonthill Augst 31st 1781
            
            I begin to despair of ever seeing you again at Fonthill & shall 
            think soon you are as rooted to your Hill as its Lawrels. We have 
            a nightly bustle here & a beastly confusion of workmen, from which 
            the Lord deliver me; but I have got a trick of going to Witham & 
            exploring its deep glades and branching oaks, with Mrs Beckford. I 
            am extremely impatient to look over my Italian Journey and will do 
            my best to make it worth looking at. Unless there is a good solid 
            trunk that cuts fair and sound in the grain I would not givea farthing 
            for Leaves and flowers, so I propose being wise and solemn in the 
            Letter of reflections & not luxuriant and sentimental.  
            Yesterday arrived a fine Epistle from Count B. so full of quaint Compliments 
            and high flown speeches that I was quite bewildered. Madame de R.s 
            imagination is inexhaustible; but I think the Counts golden vein begins 
            to be mixed with baser metals. 
            You know I have set my heart upon the success of my book & shall 
            not at all relish its being only praised as a lively, picturesque 
            excursion.  A great painter who plays upon the Violin had much 
            rather be complimented upon his Musical talent than for his excellence 
            in his profession. &c &c ........
          Mrs 
            B. Paris Feby 10 1781
            
            I cannot help confessing my weakness to you.  [89]  negligence 
            distracts me. Why did the little Fool miss the opportunity of safely 
            conveying her Letter when you offered to take care of it.  This 
            want of sensibility on her part makes me more miserable than I can 
            express. I wander about this gay glittering Town plunged in my melancholy 
            reflections and lost to the splendid tumult in which I live. In the 
            midst of a great Ball or at a pompous Supper where every face is brightened 
            by conscious beauty or magnificence my heart fails me, my countenance 
            changes dark clouds of thought come over me & I seem sinking to 
            the ground. You can divine & pity the cause of this melancholy 
            transfiguration. 
          Tunbridge 
            Wednesday
            6 May 1783 
            
            I am in a strange room wainscotted with cedar and lumbered up with 
            Chairs that gleam with brass. Yews and Spruce firs wave before the 
            windows and between their dark boughs I discover the tops of heathy 
            hills, where shiver a few miserable Sheep, for the Sky totally forgetful 
            of May sends down snow & hail and a sort of rain which partakes 
            of both and is worse than either. Those gloomy circumstances serve 
            only to set off the sweet smiles of Lady M.s countenance. She looks 
            happy and that sight gives me more joy than Sunshine ever imparted. 
            I wish you had been walking with us yesterday evening on the [90] 
            terrace of this solitary Mansion. The lights we saw twinkling amongst 
            distant woods and in shady hollows would have awakened a series of 
            romantic conjectures. Perhaps the ruddy tint which lingered in the 
            West long after the Suns going down might have revived too strongly 
            in our minds the recollections of a certain journey to Fonthill. &c. 
            
          Dover 
            Saturday
            march 18 1784 
            
            After dozing and dreaming strangely for four hours I landed in a black 
            melancholy twilight at Dover. Monday we hope to reach London. I am 
            very impatient to see you once more, my dear Friend and to assure 
            you I am as Indian as ever.  With respect to W.m I have been 
            for this fortnight past in total darkness. How I long for the light 
            of his lovely countenance! Secheron June 8 1783
            My Friend, I have been fifty times on the point of writing to you 
            & as often have I been interrupted. I lead a quiet uniform stupid 
            sort of a Life on the banks of the Lake, but never angle like the 
            rest of my neighbours. Not a Soul except old Huber has the least idea 
            why I should be discontented in the midst of smirking faces and spruce 
            habitations Every now and then the recollection of past times and 
            happy moments for ever gone rouses me from 
          
            
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