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Volume I Richardson’s Correspondence with Lady Bradshaigh and Lady Echlin, 1748–1753

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 July 2022

Peter Sabor
Affiliation:
McGill University, Montréal
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Summary

Richardson to Lady Bradshaigh

Saturday 30 July 1748

Printed source: Whitehall Evening-Post: Or, London Intelligencer, No. 386, 30

July – 2 August 1748.

First printing: Whitehall Evening-Post: Or, London Intelligencer (1748).

July 30, 1748

IF the ingenious Lady, who wrote to a certain Bookseller in London,3 about the 10th of this Month of July, and another Letter a few Days ago, both withoutName orDate; but the Post-mark of the first Letter WARRINGTON; will be pleased to signify to the Person to whom she orders those Letters to be given, how she may be addressed to by Letter; and will have the Goodness to construe as favourably as deserved, and not to the Persons Apprehension of his Suffering in his Interest for pursuing, with the best Intention, the Dictates of his own Judgment;5 all possible Satisfaction shall be endeavoured to be given her in Relation to the Subject she writes upon.

Lady Bradshaigh to Richardson

Monday 10 October 1748

Printed source: B: IV, 177–82.

First printing: Barbauld, Correspondence (1804).

October 10, 1748

I am pressed, Sir, by a multitude of your admirers, to plead in behalf of your amiable Clarissa; having too much reason, from hints given in your four volumes, from a certain advertisement, and from your forbearing to write, after promising all endeavours should be used towards satisfying the discontented; from all these, I say, I have but too much reason to apprehend a fatal catastrophe. I have heard that some of your advisers,who delight in horror, (detestablewretches!) insisted upon rapes, ruin, and destruction; others, who feel for the virtuous in distress, (blessings for ever attend them!) pleaded for the contrary. Could you be deaf to these, and comply with those? Is it possible, that he who has the art to please in softness, in the most natural, easy, humorous, and sensible manner, can resolve to give joy only to the ill-natured reader, and heave the compassionate breast with tears for irremediable woes? Tears I would choose to shed for virtue in distress; but still would suffer to flow, in greater abundance, for unexpected turns of happiness, in which, Sir, you excel any other author I ever read! where nature ought to be touched, you make the very soul feel.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2016

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