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He
stopt
a
moment
for
recollection
,
and
then
,
with
another
sigh
,
went
on
.
"
You
have
probably
entirely
forgotten
a
conversation
—
(
it
is
not
to
be
supposed
that
it
could
make
any
impression
on
you
)
—
a
conversation
between
us
one
evening
at
Barton
Park
—
it
was
the
evening
of
a
dance
—
in
which
I
alluded
to
a
lady
I
had
once
known
,
as
resembling
,
in
some
measure
,
your
sister
Marianne
.
"
"
Indeed
,
"
answered
Elinor
,
"
I
have
NOT
forgotten
it
.
"
He
looked
pleased
by
this
remembrance
,
and
added
,
"
If
I
am
not
deceived
by
the
uncertainty
,
the
partiality
of
tender
recollection
,
there
is
a
very
strong
resemblance
between
them
,
as
well
in
mind
as
person
.
The
same
warmth
of
heart
,
the
same
eagerness
of
fancy
and
spirits
.
This
lady
was
one
of
my
nearest
relations
,
an
orphan
from
her
infancy
,
and
under
the
guardianship
of
my
father
.
Our
ages
were
nearly
the
same
,
and
from
our
earliest
years
we
were
playfellows
and
friends
.
I
cannot
remember
the
time
when
I
did
not
love
Eliza
;
and
my
affection
for
her
,
as
we
grew
up
,
was
such
,
as
perhaps
,
judging
from
my
present
forlorn
and
cheerless
gravity
,
you
might
think
me
incapable
of
having
ever
felt
.
Hers
,
for
me
,
was
,
I
believe
,
fervent
as
the
attachment
of
your
sister
to
Mr
.
Willoughby
and
it
was
,
though
from
a
different
cause
,
no
less
unfortunate
.
At
seventeen
she
was
lost
to
me
for
ever
.
She
was
married
—
married
against
her
inclination
to
my
brother
.
Her
fortune
was
large
,
and
our
family
estate
much
encumbered
.
And
this
,
I
fear
,
is
all
that
can
be
said
for
the
conduct
of
one
,
who
was
at
once
her
uncle
and
guardian
.
My
brother
did
not
deserve
her
;
he
did
not
even
love
her
.
I
had
hoped
that
her
regard
for
me
would
support
her
under
any
difficulty
,
and
for
some
time
it
did
;
but
at
last
the
misery
of
her
situation
,
for
she
experienced
great
unkindness
,
overcame
all
her
resolution
,
and
though
she
had
promised
me
that
nothing
—
but
how
blindly
I
relate
!
I
have
never
told
you
how
this
was
brought
on
.
We
were
within
a
few
hours
of
eloping
together
for
Scotland
.
The
treachery
,
or
the
folly
,
of
my
cousin
’
s
maid
betrayed
us
.
I
was
banished
to
the
house
of
a
relation
far
distant
,
and
she
was
allowed
no
liberty
,
no
society
,
no
amusement
,
till
my
father
’
s
point
was
gained
.
I
had
depended
on
her
fortitude
too
far
,
and
the
blow
was
a
severe
one
—
but
had
her
marriage
been
happy
,
so
young
as
I
then
was
,
a
few
months
must
have
reconciled
me
to
it
,
or
at
least
I
should
not
have
now
to
lament
it
.
This
however
was
not
the
case
.
My
brother
had
no
regard
for
her
;
his
pleasures
were
not
what
they
ought
to
have
been
,
and
from
the
first
he
treated
her
unkindly
.
The
consequence
of
this
,
upon
a
mind
so
young
,
so
lively
,
so
inexperienced
as
Mrs
.
Brandon
’
s
,
was
but
too
natural
.
She
resigned
herself
at
first
to
all
the
misery
of
her
situation
;
and
happy
had
it
been
if
she
had
not
lived
to
overcome
those
regrets
which
the
remembrance
of
me
occasioned
.
But
can
we
wonder
that
,
with
such
a
husband
to
provoke
inconstancy
,
and
without
a
friend
to
advise
or
restrain
her
(
for
my
father
lived
only
a
few
months
after
their
marriage
,
and
I
was
with
my
regiment
in
the
East
Indies
)
she
should
fall
?
Had
I
remained
in
England
,
perhaps
—
but
I
meant
to
promote
the
happiness
of
both
by
removing
from
her
for
years
,
and
for
that
purpose
had
procured
my
exchange
.
The
shock
which
her
marriage
had
given
me
,
"
he
continued
,
in
a
voice
of
great
agitation
,
"
was
of
trifling
weight
—
was
nothing
to
what
I
felt
when
I
heard
,
about
two
years
afterwards
,
of
her
divorce
.
It
was
THAT
which
threw
this
gloom
,
—
even
now
the
recollection
of
what
I
suffered
—
"
He
could
say
no
more
,
and
rising
hastily
walked
for
a
few
minutes
about
the
room
.
Elinor
,
affected
by
his
relation
,
and
still
more
by
his
distress
,
could
not
speak
.
He
saw
her
concern
,
and
coming
to
her
,
took
her
hand
,
pressed
it
,
and
kissed
it
with
grateful
respect
.
A
few
minutes
more
of
silent
exertion
enabled
him
to
proceed
with
composure
.
"
It
was
nearly
three
years
after
this
unhappy
period
before
I
returned
to
England
.
My
first
care
,
when
I
DID
arrive
,
was
of
course
to
seek
for
her
;
but
the
search
was
as
fruitless
as
it
was
melancholy
.
I
could
not
trace
her
beyond
her
first
seducer
,
and
there
was
every
reason
to
fear
that
she
had
removed
from
him
only
to
sink
deeper
in
a
life
of
sin
.
Her
legal
allowance
was
not
adequate
to
her
fortune
,
nor
sufficient
for
her
comfortable
maintenance
,
and
I
learnt
from
my
brother
that
the
power
of
receiving
it
had
been
made
over
some
months
before
to
another
person
.
He
imagined
,
and
calmly
could
he
imagine
it
,
that
her
extravagance
,
and
consequent
distress
,
had
obliged
her
to
dispose
of
it
for
some
immediate
relief
.
At
last
,
however
,
and
after
I
had
been
six
months
in
England
,
I
DID
find
her
.
Regard
for
a
former
servant
of
my
own
,
who
had
since
fallen
into
misfortune
,
carried
me
to
visit
him
in
a
spunging
-
house
,
where
he
was
confined
for
debt
;
and
there
,
in
the
same
house
,
under
a
similar
confinement
,
was
my
unfortunate
sister
.
So
altered
—
so
faded
—
worn
down
by
acute
suffering
of
every
kind
!
hardly
could
I
believe
the
melancholy
and
sickly
figure
before
me
,
to
be
the
remains
of
the
lovely
,
blooming
,
healthful
girl
,
on
whom
I
had
once
doted
.
What
I
endured
in
so
beholding
her
—
but
I
have
no
right
to
wound
your
feelings
by
attempting
to
describe
it
—
I
have
pained
you
too
much
already
.
That
she
was
,
to
all
appearance
,
in
the
last
stage
of
a
consumption
,
was
—
yes
,
in
such
a
situation
it
was
my
greatest
comfort
.
Life
could
do
nothing
for
her
,
beyond
giving
time
for
a
better
preparation
for
death
;
and
that
was
given
.
I
saw
her
placed
in
comfortable
lodgings
,
and
under
proper
attendants
;
I
visited
her
every
day
during
the
rest
of
her
short
life
:
I
was
with
her
in
her
last
moments
.
"
Again
he
stopped
to
recover
himself
;
and
Elinor
spoke
her
feelings
in
an
exclamation
of
tender
concern
,
at
the
fate
of
his
unfortunate
friend
.