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"
Your
sister
,
I
hope
,
cannot
be
offended
,
"
said
he
,
"
by
the
resemblance
I
have
fancied
between
her
and
my
poor
disgraced
relation
.
Their
fates
,
their
fortunes
,
cannot
be
the
same
;
and
had
the
natural
sweet
disposition
of
the
one
been
guarded
by
a
firmer
mind
,
or
a
happier
marriage
,
she
might
have
been
all
that
you
will
live
to
see
the
other
be
.
But
to
what
does
all
this
lead
?
I
seem
to
have
been
distressing
you
for
nothing
.
Ah
!
Miss
Dashwood
a
subject
such
as
this
untouched
for
fourteen
years
it
is
dangerous
to
handle
it
at
all
!
I
WILL
be
more
collected
more
concise
.
She
left
to
my
care
her
only
child
,
a
little
girl
,
the
offspring
of
her
first
guilty
connection
,
who
was
then
about
three
years
old
.
She
loved
the
child
,
and
had
always
kept
it
with
her
.
It
was
a
valued
,
a
precious
trust
to
me
;
and
gladly
would
I
have
discharged
it
in
the
strictest
sense
,
by
watching
over
her
education
myself
,
had
the
nature
of
our
situations
allowed
it
;
but
I
had
no
family
,
no
home
;
and
my
little
Eliza
was
therefore
placed
at
school
.
I
saw
her
there
whenever
I
could
,
and
after
the
death
of
my
brother
,
(
which
happened
about
five
years
ago
,
and
which
left
to
me
the
possession
of
the
family
property
,
)
she
visited
me
at
Delaford
.
I
called
her
a
distant
relation
;
but
I
am
well
aware
that
I
have
in
general
been
suspected
of
a
much
nearer
connection
with
her
.
It
is
now
three
years
ago
(
she
had
just
reached
her
fourteenth
year
,
)
that
I
removed
her
from
school
,
to
place
her
under
the
care
of
a
very
respectable
woman
,
residing
in
Dorsetshire
,
who
had
the
charge
of
four
or
five
other
girls
of
about
the
same
time
of
life
;
and
for
two
years
I
had
every
reason
to
be
pleased
with
her
situation
.
But
last
February
,
almost
a
twelvemonth
back
,
she
suddenly
disappeared
.
I
had
allowed
her
,
(
imprudently
,
as
it
has
since
turned
out
,
)
at
her
earnest
desire
,
to
go
to
Bath
with
one
of
her
young
friends
,
who
was
attending
her
father
there
for
his
health
.
I
knew
him
to
be
a
very
good
sort
of
man
,
and
I
thought
well
of
his
daughter
better
than
she
deserved
,
for
,
with
a
most
obstinate
and
ill
-
judged
secrecy
,
she
would
tell
nothing
,
would
give
no
clue
,
though
she
certainly
knew
all
.
He
,
her
father
,
a
well
-
meaning
,
but
not
a
quick
-
sighted
man
,
could
really
,
I
believe
,
give
no
information
;
for
he
had
been
generally
confined
to
the
house
,
while
the
girls
were
ranging
over
the
town
and
making
what
acquaintance
they
chose
;
and
he
tried
to
convince
me
,
as
thoroughly
as
he
was
convinced
himself
,
of
his
daughter
s
being
entirely
unconcerned
in
the
business
.
In
short
,
I
could
learn
nothing
but
that
she
was
gone
;
all
the
rest
,
for
eight
long
months
,
was
left
to
conjecture
.
What
I
thought
,
what
I
feared
,
may
be
imagined
;
and
what
I
suffered
too
.
"
Отключить рекламу
"
Good
heavens
!
"
cried
Elinor
,
"
could
it
be
could
Willoughby
!
"
"
The
first
news
that
reached
me
of
her
,
"
he
continued
,
"
came
in
a
letter
from
herself
,
last
October
.
It
was
forwarded
to
me
from
Delaford
,
and
I
received
it
on
the
very
morning
of
our
intended
party
to
Whitwell
;
and
this
was
the
reason
of
my
leaving
Barton
so
suddenly
,
which
I
am
sure
must
at
the
time
have
appeared
strange
to
every
body
,
and
which
I
believe
gave
offence
to
some
.
Little
did
Mr
.
Willoughby
imagine
,
I
suppose
,
when
his
looks
censured
me
for
incivility
in
breaking
up
the
party
,
that
I
was
called
away
to
the
relief
of
one
whom
he
had
made
poor
and
miserable
;
but
HAD
he
known
it
,
what
would
it
have
availed
?
Would
he
have
been
less
gay
or
less
happy
in
the
smiles
of
your
sister
?
No
,
he
had
already
done
that
,
which
no
man
who
CAN
feel
for
another
would
do
.
He
had
left
the
girl
whose
youth
and
innocence
he
had
seduced
,
in
a
situation
of
the
utmost
distress
,
with
no
creditable
home
,
no
help
,
no
friends
,
ignorant
of
his
address
!
He
had
left
her
,
promising
to
return
;
he
neither
returned
,
nor
wrote
,
nor
relieved
her
.
"
"
This
is
beyond
every
thing
!
"
exclaimed
Elinor
.
Отключить рекламу
"
His
character
is
now
before
you
;
expensive
,
dissipated
,
and
worse
than
both
.
Knowing
all
this
,
as
I
have
now
known
it
many
weeks
,
guess
what
I
must
have
felt
on
seeing
your
sister
as
fond
of
him
as
ever
,
and
on
being
assured
that
she
was
to
marry
him
:
guess
what
I
must
have
felt
for
all
your
sakes
.
When
I
came
to
you
last
week
and
found
you
alone
,
I
came
determined
to
know
the
truth
;
though
irresolute
what
to
do
when
it
WAS
known
.
My
behaviour
must
have
seemed
strange
to
you
then
;
but
now
you
will
comprehend
it
.
To
suffer
you
all
to
be
so
deceived
;
to
see
your
sister
but
what
could
I
do
?
I
had
no
hope
of
interfering
with
success
;
and
sometimes
I
thought
your
sister
s
influence
might
yet
reclaim
him
.
But
now
,
after
such
dishonorable
usage
,
who
can
tell
what
were
his
designs
on
her
.
Whatever
they
may
have
been
,
however
,
she
may
now
,
and
hereafter
doubtless
WILL
turn
with
gratitude
towards
her
own
condition
,
when
she
compares
it
with
that
of
my
poor
Eliza
,
when
she
considers
the
wretched
and
hopeless
situation
of
this
poor
girl
,
and
pictures
her
to
herself
,
with
an
affection
for
him
so
strong
,
still
as
strong
as
her
own
,
and
with
a
mind
tormented
by
self
-
reproach
,
which
must
attend
her
through
life
.
Surely
this
comparison
must
have
its
use
with
her
.
She
will
feel
her
own
sufferings
to
be
nothing
.
They
proceed
from
no
misconduct
,
and
can
bring
no
disgrace
.
On
the
contrary
,
every
friend
must
be
made
still
more
her
friend
by
them
.
Concern
for
her
unhappiness
,
and
respect
for
her
fortitude
under
it
,
must
strengthen
every
attachment
.
Use
your
own
discretion
,
however
,
in
communicating
to
her
what
I
have
told
you
.
You
must
know
best
what
will
be
its
effect
;
but
had
I
not
seriously
,
and
from
my
heart
believed
it
might
be
of
service
,
might
lessen
her
regrets
,
I
would
not
have
suffered
myself
to
trouble
you
with
this
account
of
my
family
afflictions
,
with
a
recital
which
may
seem
to
have
been
intended
to
raise
myself
at
the
expense
of
others
.
"
Elinor
s
thanks
followed
this
speech
with
grateful
earnestness
;
attended
too
with
the
assurance
of
her
expecting
material
advantage
to
Marianne
,
from
the
communication
of
what
had
passed
.