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"
LUCY
FERRARS
.
"
I
have
burnt
all
your
letters
,
and
will
return
your
picture
the
first
opportunity
.
Please
to
destroy
my
scrawls
but
the
ring
with
my
hair
you
are
very
welcome
to
keep
.
"
Elinor
read
and
returned
it
without
any
comment
.
Отключить рекламу
"
I
will
not
ask
your
opinion
of
it
as
a
composition
,
"
said
Edward
.
"
For
worlds
would
not
I
have
had
a
letter
of
hers
seen
by
YOU
in
former
days
.
In
a
sister
it
is
bad
enough
,
but
in
a
wife
!
how
I
have
blushed
over
the
pages
of
her
writing
!
and
I
believe
I
may
say
that
since
the
first
half
year
of
our
foolish
business
this
is
the
only
letter
I
ever
received
from
her
,
of
which
the
substance
made
me
any
amends
for
the
defect
of
the
style
.
"
"
However
it
may
have
come
about
,
"
said
Elinor
,
after
a
pause
,
"
they
are
certainly
married
.
And
your
mother
has
brought
on
herself
a
most
appropriate
punishment
.
The
independence
she
settled
on
Robert
,
through
resentment
against
you
,
has
put
it
in
his
power
to
make
his
own
choice
;
and
she
has
actually
been
bribing
one
son
with
a
thousand
a
-
year
,
to
do
the
very
deed
which
she
disinherited
the
other
for
intending
to
do
.
She
will
hardly
be
less
hurt
,
I
suppose
,
by
Robert
s
marrying
Lucy
,
than
she
would
have
been
by
your
marrying
her
.
"
"
She
will
be
more
hurt
by
it
,
for
Robert
always
was
her
favourite
.
She
will
be
more
hurt
by
it
,
and
on
the
same
principle
will
forgive
him
much
sooner
.
"
Отключить рекламу
In
what
state
the
affair
stood
at
present
between
them
,
Edward
knew
not
,
for
no
communication
with
any
of
his
family
had
yet
been
attempted
by
him
.
He
had
quitted
Oxford
within
four
and
twenty
hours
after
Lucy
s
letter
arrived
,
and
with
only
one
object
before
him
,
the
nearest
road
to
Barton
,
had
had
no
leisure
to
form
any
scheme
of
conduct
,
with
which
that
road
did
not
hold
the
most
intimate
connection
.
He
could
do
nothing
till
he
were
assured
of
his
fate
with
Miss
Dashwood
;
and
by
his
rapidity
in
seeking
THAT
fate
,
it
is
to
be
supposed
,
in
spite
of
the
jealousy
with
which
he
had
once
thought
of
Colonel
Brandon
,
in
spite
of
the
modesty
with
which
he
rated
his
own
deserts
,
and
the
politeness
with
which
he
talked
of
his
doubts
,
he
did
not
,
upon
the
whole
,
expect
a
very
cruel
reception
.
It
was
his
business
,
however
,
to
say
that
he
DID
,
and
he
said
it
very
prettily
.
What
he
might
say
on
the
subject
a
twelvemonth
after
,
must
be
referred
to
the
imagination
of
husbands
and
wives
.
That
Lucy
had
certainly
meant
to
deceive
,
to
go
off
with
a
flourish
of
malice
against
him
in
her
message
by
Thomas
,
was
perfectly
clear
to
Elinor
;
and
Edward
himself
,
now
thoroughly
enlightened
on
her
character
,
had
no
scruple
in
believing
her
capable
of
the
utmost
meanness
of
wanton
ill
-
nature
.
Though
his
eyes
had
been
long
opened
,
even
before
his
acquaintance
with
Elinor
began
,
to
her
ignorance
and
a
want
of
liberality
in
some
of
her
opinions
they
had
been
equally
imputed
,
by
him
,
to
her
want
of
education
;
and
till
her
last
letter
reached
him
,
he
had
always
believed
her
to
be
a
well
-
disposed
,
good
-
hearted
girl
,
and
thoroughly
attached
to
himself
.
Nothing
but
such
a
persuasion
could
have
prevented
his
putting
an
end
to
an
engagement
,
which
,
long
before
the
discovery
of
it
laid
him
open
to
his
mother
s
anger
,
had
been
a
continual
source
of
disquiet
and
regret
to
him
.