Containing Love-Letters of Several Sorts
- When Tom gets home, he finds three letters waiting for him from Lady Bellaston:
- Letter #1: Should she see Tom again or shouldn't she? She wants to hear his explanations of "this affair" (15.9.2). Come at once!
- Letter #2: If he doesn't come right now, she is never going to forgive him.
- Letter #3: Apparently, he was not at home when she sent her previous notes. So the second that he gets this current note, she commands him to come and see her.
- Mr. Nightingale comes in and asks if Lady Bellaston has anything to say after the disaster last night?
- It turns out that Mr. Nightingale has known all along that Tom's been sleeping with Lady Bellaston.
- And Tom is not the first young guy she's seduced, either.
- Tom decides he can speak freely to Mr. Nightingale about this affair.
- He says that he loves another woman, but that he owes Lady Bellaston a lot.
- After all, it's thanks to her that he hasn't starved in London.
- Mr. Nightingale has an idea: Tom should propose marriage to Lady Bellaston.
- The minute he proposes, she'll drop him like a hot coal.
- Apparently, she's done this before, with a young man who really meant it when he proposed.
- So Tom writes a note to Lady Bellaston asking her to marry him.
- She writes back asking how he can reward her favors with something so awful as an offer of marriage?
- Does he believe that he can persuadeher to give up her fortune to him like that?
- Tom answers (with Mr. Nightingale's advice): How can you (Lady Bellaston) think that I (Tom) would treat your honor so lightly?
- If that's what you think of me (Tom writes) then we must part.
- Lady Bellaston writes to Tom that he is a villain.
- Tom is glad to be free of Lady Bellaston, but he feels a bit of guilt over his dishonesty.
- They go down to dinner with Mrs. Miller.
- As dinner ends, Mrs. Miller receives a letter.