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"
Miss
Woodhouse
,
as
you
will
not
give
me
your
opinion
,
I
must
do
as
well
as
I
can
by
myself
;
and
I
have
now
quite
determined
,
and
really
almost
made
up
my
mind
--
to
refuse
Mr.
Martin
.
Do
you
think
I
am
right
?
"
"
Perfectly
,
perfectly
right
,
my
dearest
Harriet
;
you
are
doing
just
what
you
ought
.
While
you
were
at
all
in
suspense
I
kept
my
feelings
to
myself
,
but
now
that
you
are
so
completely
decided
I
have
no
hesitation
in
approving
.
Dear
Harriet
,
I
give
myself
joy
of
this
.
It
would
have
grieved
me
to
lose
your
acquaintance
,
which
must
have
been
the
consequence
of
your
marrying
Mr.
Martin
.
While
you
were
in
the
smallest
degree
wavering
,
I
said
nothing
about
it
,
because
I
would
not
influence
;
but
it
would
have
been
the
loss
of
a
friend
to
me
.
I
could
not
have
visited
Mrs.
Robert
Martin
,
of
Abbey-Mill
Farm
.
Now
I
am
secure
of
you
for
ever
.
"
Harriet
had
not
surmised
her
own
danger
,
but
the
idea
of
it
struck
her
forcibly
.
"
You
could
not
have
visited
me
!
"
she
cried
,
looking
aghast
.
"
No
,
to
be
sure
you
could
not
;
but
I
never
thought
of
that
before
.
That
would
have
been
too
dreadful
!
--
What
an
escape
!
--
Dear
Miss
Woodhouse
,
I
would
not
give
up
the
pleasure
and
honour
of
being
intimate
with
you
for
any
thing
in
the
world
.
"
"
Indeed
,
Harriet
,
it
would
have
been
a
severe
pang
to
lose
you
;
but
it
must
have
been
.
You
would
have
thrown
yourself
out
of
all
good
society
.
I
must
have
given
you
up
.
"
"
Dear
me
!
--
How
should
I
ever
have
borne
it
!
It
would
have
killed
me
never
to
come
to
Hartfield
any
more
!
"
"
Dear
affectionate
creature
!
--
You
banished
to
Abbey-Mill
Farm
!
--
You
confined
to
the
society
of
the
illiterate
and
vulgar
all
your
life
!
I
wonder
how
the
young
man
could
have
the
assurance
to
ask
it
.
He
must
have
a
pretty
good
opinion
of
himself
.
"
"
I
do
not
think
he
is
conceited
either
,
in
general
,
"
said
Harriet
,
her
conscience
opposing
such
censure
;
"
at
least
,
he
is
very
good
natured
,
and
I
shall
always
feel
much
obliged
to
him
,
and
have
a
great
regard
for
--
but
that
is
quite
a
different
thing
from
--
and
you
know
,
though
he
may
like
me
,
it
does
not
follow
that
I
should
--
and
certainly
I
must
confess
that
since
my
visiting
here
I
have
seen
people
--
and
if
one
comes
to
compare
them
,
person
and
manners
,
there
is
no
comparison
at
all
,
one
is
so
very
handsome
and
agreeable
.
However
,
I
do
really
think
Mr.
Martin
a
very
amiable
young
man
,
and
have
a
great
opinion
of
him
;
and
his
being
so
much
attached
to
me
--
and
his
writing
such
a
letter
--
but
as
to
leaving
you
,
it
is
what
I
would
not
do
upon
any
consideration
.
"