(3.) In "Jack and Alice," there is the more irreverent example of Jack's death financially enabling Alice's romantic prospects with Charles: "By his decease, his sister became the sole inheritress of a very large fortune, which as it gave her fresh Hopes of rendering herself acceptable as a wife to Charles Adams could not fail of being most pleasing to her--and as the effect was Joyfull the Cause could scarcely be lamented" (25).