Page:Posthumous Works of Mary Wollstonecraft Vol3.djvu/180

164 be my inferiors.—I will listen to delicacy, or pride.

4em

to hear from you by to-morrow's mail. My dearest friend! I cannot tear my affections from you—and, though every remembrance stings me to the soul, I think of you, till I make allowance for the very defects of character, that have given such a cruel stab to my peace.

Still however I am more alive, than you have seen me for a long, long time. I have