<h2>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
<p>That, which in a weak woman is called vanity, in a man of
sense is termed pride. Make one a degree stronger, or the
other a degree weaker, and the dean and his wife were infected
with the self-same folly. Yet, let not the reader suppose
that this failing (however despicable) had erased from either
bosom all traces of humanity. They are human creatures who
are meant to be portrayed in this little book: and where is the
human creature who has not some good qualities to soften, if not
to counterbalance, his bad ones?</p>
<p>The dean, with all his pride, could not wholly forget his
brother, nor eradicate from his remembrance the friend that he
had been to him: he resolved, therefore, in spite of his
wife’s advice, to make him some overture, which he had no
doubt Henry’s good-nature would instantly accept. The
more he became acquainted with all the vain and selfish
propensities of Lady Clementina, the more he felt a returning
affection for his brother: but little did he suspect how much he
loved him, till (after sending to various places to inquire for
him) he learned—that on his wife’s decease, unable to
support her loss in the surrounding scene, Henry had taken the
child she brought him in his arms, shaken hands with all his
former friends—passing over his brother in the
number—and set sail in a vessel bound for Africa, with a
party of Portuguese and some few English adventurers, to people
there the uninhabited part of an extensive island.</p>
<p>This was a resolution, in Henry’s circumstances, worthy
a mind of singular sensibility: but William had not discerned,
till then, that every act of Henry’s was of the same
description; and more than all, his every act towards him.
He staggered when he heard the tidings; at first thought them
untrue; but quickly recollected, that Henry was capable of
surprising deeds! He recollected with a force which gave
him torture, the benevolence his brother had ever shown to
him—the favours he had heaped upon him—the insults he
had patiently endured in requital!</p>
<p>In the first emotion, which this intelligence gave the dean,
he forgot the dignity of his walk and gesture: he ran with
frantic enthusiasm to every corner of his deanery where the least
vestige of what belonged to Henry remained—he pressed close
to his breast, with tender agony, a coat of his, which by
accident had been left there—he kissed and wept over a
walking-stick which Henry once had given him—he even took
up with delight a music book of his brother’s—nor
would his poor violin have then excited anger.</p>
<p>When his grief became more calm, he sat in deep and melancholy
meditation, calling to mind when and where he saw his brother
last. The recollection gave him fresh cause of
regret. He remembered they had parted on his refusing to
suffer Lady Clementina to admit the acquaintance of Henry’s
wife. Both Henry and his wife he now contemplated beyond
the reach of his pride; and he felt the meanness of his former
and the imbecility of his future haughtiness towards them.</p>
<p>To add to his self-reproaches, his tormented memory presented
to him the exact countenance of his brother at their last
interview, as it changed, while he censured his marriage, and
treated with disrespect the object of his conjugal
affection. He remembered the anger repressed, the tear
bursting forth, and the last glimpse he had of him, as he left
his presence, most likely for ever.</p>
<p>In vain he now wished that he had followed him to the
door—that he had once shaken hands and owned his
obligations to him before they had parted. In vain he
wished too, that, in this extreme agony of his mind, he had such
a friend to comfort him, as Henry had ever proved.</p>
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