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ignorant, as the adventure of the muff, and other particulars,concealing only the name of Sophia. He then lamented the follies andvices of which he had been guilty; every one of which, he said, hadbeen attended with such ill consequences, that he should beunpardonable if he did not take warning, and quit those viciouscourses for the future. He lastly concluded with assuring her of hisresolution to sin no more, lest a worse thing should happen to him.Mrs Waters with great pleasantry ridiculed all this, as the effects oflow spirits and confinement. She repeated some witticisms about thedevil when he was sick, and told him, "She doubted not but shortly tosee him at liberty, and as lively a fellow as ever; and then," saysshe, "I don't question but your conscience will be safely delivered ofall these qualms that it is now so sick in breeding."Many more things of this kind she uttered, some of which it would doher no great honour, in the opinion of some readers, to remember; norare we quite certain but that the answers made by Jones would betreated with ridicule by others. We shall therefore suppress the restof this conversation, and only observe that it ended at last withperfect innocence, and much more to the satisfaction of Jones than ofthe lady; for the former was greatly transported with the news she hadbrought him; but the latter was not altogether so pleased with thepenitential behaviour of a man whom she had, at her first interview,conceived a very different opinion of from what she now entertained ofhim.Thus the melancholy occasioned by the report of Mr Nightingale waspretty well effaced; but the dejection into which Mrs Miller hadthrown him still continued. The account she gave so well tallied withthe words of Sophia herself in her letter, that he made not the leastdoubt but that she had disclosed his letter to her aunt, and had takena fixed resolution to abandon him. The torments this thought gave himwere to be equalled only by a piece of news which fortune had yet instore for him, and which we shall communicate in the second chapter ofthe ensuing book.BOOK XVIII.CONTAINING ABOUT SIX DAYS.Chapter i.A farewel to the reader.We are now, reader, arrived at the last stage of our long journey. Aswe have, therefore, travelled together through so many pages, let usbehave to one another like fellow-travellers in a stage coach, whohave passed several days in the company of each other; and who,notwithstanding any bickerings or little animosities which may haveoccurred on the road, generally make all up at last, and mount, forthe last time, into their vehicle with chearfulness and good humour;since after this one stage, it may possibly happen to us, as itcommonly happens to them, never to meet more.

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