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"
It
is
very
true
.
MY
happiness
never
was
his
object
.
"
"
At
present
,
"
continued
Elinor
,
"
he
regrets
what
he
has
done
.
And
why
does
he
regret
it
?
Because
he
finds
it
has
not
answered
towards
himself
.
It
has
not
made
him
happy
.
His
circumstances
are
now
unembarrassed
he
suffers
from
no
evil
of
that
kind
;
and
he
thinks
only
that
he
has
married
a
woman
of
a
less
amiable
temper
than
yourself
.
But
does
it
follow
that
had
he
married
you
,
he
would
have
been
happy
?
The
inconveniences
would
have
been
different
.
He
would
then
have
suffered
under
the
pecuniary
distresses
which
,
because
they
are
removed
,
he
now
reckons
as
nothing
.
He
would
have
had
a
wife
of
whose
temper
he
could
make
no
complaint
,
but
he
would
have
been
always
necessitous
always
poor
;
and
probably
would
soon
have
learned
to
rank
the
innumerable
comforts
of
a
clear
estate
and
good
income
as
of
far
more
importance
,
even
to
domestic
happiness
,
than
the
mere
temper
of
a
wife
.
"
"
I
have
not
a
doubt
of
it
,
"
said
Marianne
;
"
and
I
have
nothing
to
regret
nothing
but
my
own
folly
.
"
Отключить рекламу
"
Rather
say
your
mother
s
imprudence
,
my
child
,
"
said
Mrs
.
Dashwood
;
"
SHE
must
be
answerable
.
"
Marianne
would
not
let
her
proceed
;
and
Elinor
,
satisfied
that
each
felt
their
own
error
,
wished
to
avoid
any
survey
of
the
past
that
might
weaken
her
sister
s
spirits
;
she
,
therefore
,
pursuing
the
first
subject
,
immediately
continued
,
"
One
observation
may
,
I
think
,
be
fairly
drawn
from
the
whole
of
the
story
that
all
Willoughby
s
difficulties
have
arisen
from
the
first
offence
against
virtue
,
in
his
behaviour
to
Eliza
Williams
.
That
crime
has
been
the
origin
of
every
lesser
one
,
and
of
all
his
present
discontents
.
"
Отключить рекламу
Marianne
assented
most
feelingly
to
the
remark
;
and
her
mother
was
led
by
it
to
an
enumeration
of
Colonel
Brandon
s
injuries
and
merits
,
warm
as
friendship
and
design
could
unitedly
dictate
.
Her
daughter
did
not
look
,
however
,
as
if
much
of
it
were
heard
by
her
.
Elinor
,
according
to
her
expectation
,
saw
on
the
two
or
three
following
days
,
that
Marianne
did
not
continue
to
gain
strength
as
she
had
done
;
but
while
her
resolution
was
unsubdued
,
and
she
still
tried
to
appear
cheerful
and
easy
,
her
sister
could
safely
trust
to
the
effect
of
time
upon
her
health
.
Margaret
returned
,
and
the
family
were
again
all
restored
to
each
other
,
again
quietly
settled
at
the
cottage
;
and
if
not
pursuing
their
usual
studies
with
quite
so
much
vigour
as
when
they
first
came
to
Barton
,
at
least
planning
a
vigorous
prosecution
of
them
in
future
.