Page:Posthumous Works of Mary Wollstonecraft Vol3.djvu/96

80 tion, I only lament other disappointments, because I am sorry that you should thus exert yourself in vain, and that you are kept from me.

, I know, urges you to stay, and is continually branching out into new projects, because he has the idle desire to amass a large fortune, rather an immense one, merely to have the credit of having made it. But we who are governed by other motives, ought not to be led on by him. When we meet, we will discuss this subject—You will listen to reason, and it has probably occurred to you, that it will be better, in future, to pursue some sober plan, which may demand more time, and still enable you to arrive at the same end. It appears to me absurd to waste life in preparing to live.

Would it not now be possible to ar- range