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"
I
wish
to
assure
you
both
,
"
said
she
,
"
that
I
see
every
thing
as
you
can
desire
me
to
do
.
"
Mrs
.
Dashwood
would
have
interrupted
her
instantly
with
soothing
tenderness
,
had
not
Elinor
,
who
really
wished
to
hear
her
sister
s
unbiased
opinion
,
by
an
eager
sign
,
engaged
her
silence
.
Marianne
slowly
continued
"
It
is
a
great
relief
to
me
what
Elinor
told
me
this
morning
I
have
now
heard
exactly
what
I
wished
to
hear
.
"
For
some
moments
her
voice
was
lost
;
but
recovering
herself
,
she
added
,
and
with
greater
calmness
than
before
"
I
am
now
perfectly
satisfied
,
I
wish
for
no
change
.
I
never
could
have
been
happy
with
him
,
after
knowing
,
as
sooner
or
later
I
must
have
known
,
all
this
.
I
should
have
had
no
confidence
,
no
esteem
.
Nothing
could
have
done
it
away
to
my
feelings
.
"
Отключить рекламу
"
I
know
it
I
know
it
,
"
cried
her
mother
.
"
Happy
with
a
man
of
libertine
practices
!
With
one
who
so
injured
the
peace
of
the
dearest
of
our
friends
,
and
the
best
of
men
!
No
my
Marianne
has
not
a
heart
to
be
made
happy
with
such
a
man
!
Her
conscience
,
her
sensitive
conscience
,
would
have
felt
all
that
the
conscience
of
her
husband
ought
to
have
felt
.
"
Marianne
sighed
,
and
repeated
,
"
I
wish
for
no
change
.
"
"
You
consider
the
matter
,
"
said
Elinor
,
"
exactly
as
a
good
mind
and
a
sound
understanding
must
consider
it
;
and
I
dare
say
you
perceive
,
as
well
as
myself
,
not
only
in
this
,
but
in
many
other
circumstances
,
reason
enough
to
be
convinced
that
your
marriage
must
have
involved
you
in
many
certain
troubles
and
disappointments
,
in
which
you
would
have
been
poorly
supported
by
an
affection
,
on
his
side
,
much
less
certain
.
Had
you
married
,
you
must
have
been
always
poor
.
His
expensiveness
is
acknowledged
even
by
himself
,
and
his
whole
conduct
declares
that
self
-
denial
is
a
word
hardly
understood
by
him
.
His
demands
and
your
inexperience
together
,
on
a
small
,
very
small
income
,
must
have
brought
on
distresses
which
would
not
be
the
LESS
grievous
to
you
,
from
having
been
entirely
unknown
and
unthought
of
before
.
YOUR
sense
of
honour
and
honesty
would
have
led
you
,
I
know
,
when
aware
of
your
situation
,
to
attempt
all
the
economy
that
would
appear
to
you
possible
:
and
,
perhaps
,
as
long
as
your
frugality
retrenched
only
on
your
own
comfort
,
you
might
have
been
suffered
to
practice
it
,
but
beyond
that
and
how
little
could
the
utmost
of
your
single
management
do
to
stop
the
ruin
which
had
begun
before
your
marriage
?
Beyond
THAT
,
had
you
endeavoured
,
however
reasonably
,
to
abridge
HIS
enjoyments
,
is
it
not
to
be
feared
,
that
instead
of
prevailing
on
feelings
so
selfish
to
consent
to
it
,
you
would
have
lessened
your
own
influence
on
his
heart
,
and
made
him
regret
the
connection
which
had
involved
him
in
such
difficulties
?
"
Отключить рекламу
Marianne
s
lips
quivered
,
and
she
repeated
the
word
"
Selfish
?
"
in
a
tone
that
implied
"
do
you
really
think
him
selfish
?
"
"
The
whole
of
his
behaviour
,
"
replied
Elinor
,
"
from
the
beginning
to
the
end
of
the
affair
,
has
been
grounded
on
selfishness
.
It
was
selfishness
which
first
made
him
sport
with
your
affections
;
which
afterwards
,
when
his
own
were
engaged
,
made
him
delay
the
confession
of
it
,
and
which
finally
carried
him
from
Barton
.
His
own
enjoyment
,
or
his
own
ease
,
was
,
in
every
particular
,
his
ruling
principle
.
"