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"
Poor
young
man
!
and
what
is
to
become
of
him
?
"
"
What
,
indeed
,
ma
am
!
It
is
a
melancholy
consideration
.
Born
to
the
prospect
of
such
affluence
!
I
cannot
conceive
a
situation
more
deplorable
.
The
interest
of
two
thousand
pounds
how
can
a
man
live
on
it
?
and
when
to
that
is
added
the
recollection
,
that
he
might
,
but
for
his
own
folly
,
within
three
months
have
been
in
the
receipt
of
two
thousand
,
five
hundred
a
-
year
(
for
Miss
Morton
has
thirty
thousand
pounds
,
)
I
cannot
picture
to
myself
a
more
wretched
condition
.
We
must
all
feel
for
him
;
and
the
more
so
,
because
it
is
totally
out
of
our
power
to
assist
him
.
"
"
Poor
young
man
!
"
cried
Mrs
.
Jennings
,
"
I
am
sure
he
should
be
very
welcome
to
bed
and
board
at
my
house
;
and
so
I
would
tell
him
if
I
could
see
him
.
It
is
not
fit
that
he
should
be
living
about
at
his
own
charge
now
,
at
lodgings
and
taverns
.
"
Отключить рекламу
Elinor
s
heart
thanked
her
for
such
kindness
towards
Edward
,
though
she
could
not
forbear
smiling
at
the
form
of
it
.
"
If
he
would
only
have
done
as
well
by
himself
,
"
said
John
Dashwood
,
"
as
all
his
friends
were
disposed
to
do
by
him
,
he
might
now
have
been
in
his
proper
situation
,
and
would
have
wanted
for
nothing
.
But
as
it
is
,
it
must
be
out
of
anybody
s
power
to
assist
him
And
there
is
one
thing
more
preparing
against
him
,
which
must
be
worse
than
all
his
mother
has
determined
,
with
a
very
natural
kind
of
spirit
,
to
settle
THAT
estate
upon
Robert
immediately
,
which
might
have
been
Edward
s
,
on
proper
conditions
.
I
left
her
this
morning
with
her
lawyer
,
talking
over
the
business
.
"
"
Well
!
"
said
Mrs
.
Jennings
,
"
that
is
HER
revenge
.
Everybody
has
a
way
of
their
own
.
But
I
don
t
think
mine
would
be
,
to
make
one
son
independent
,
because
another
had
plagued
me
.
"
Отключить рекламу
Marianne
got
up
and
walked
about
the
room
.
"
Can
anything
be
more
galling
to
the
spirit
of
a
man
,
"
continued
John
,
"
than
to
see
his
younger
brother
in
possession
of
an
estate
which
might
have
been
his
own
?
Poor
Edward
!
I
feel
for
him
sincerely
.
"
A
few
minutes
more
spent
in
the
same
kind
of
effusion
,
concluded
his
visit
;
and
with
repeated
assurances
to
his
sisters
that
he
really
believed
there
was
no
material
danger
in
Fanny
s
indisposition
,
and
that
they
need
not
therefore
be
very
uneasy
about
it
,
he
went
away
;
leaving
the
three
ladies
unanimous
in
their
sentiments
on
the
present
occasion
,
as
far
at
least
as
it
regarded
Mrs
.
Ferrars
s
conduct
,
the
Dashwoods
,
and
Edward
s
.