[Charlotte Temple by Susanna Rowson]@TWC D-Link bookCharlotte Temple CHAPTER XXXII 1/3
CHAPTER XXXII. REASONS WHY AND WHEREFORE. THE reader of sensibility may perhaps be astonished to find Mrs.Crayton could so positively deny any knowledge of Charlotte; it is therefore but just that her conduct should in some measure be accounted for.
She had ever been fully sensible of the superiority of Charlotte's sense and virtue; she was conscious that she had never swerved from rectitude, had it not been for her bad precepts and worse example.
These were things as yet unknown to her husband, and she wished not to have that part of her conduct exposed to him, as she had great reason to fear she had already lost considerable part of that power she once maintained over him.
She trembled whilst Charlotte was in the house, lest the Colonel should return; she perfectly well remembered how much he seemed interested in her favour whilst on their passage from England, and made no doubt, but, should he see her in her present distress, he would offer her an asylum, and protect her to the utmost of his power.
In that case she feared the unguarded nature of Charlotte might discover to the Colonel the part she had taken in the unhappy girl's elopement, and she well knew the contrast between her own and Charlotte's conduct would make the former appear in no very respectable light.
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