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- Чувство и чувствительность
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- Стр. 43/215
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In
about
half
an
hour
her
mother
returned
,
and
though
her
eyes
were
red
,
her
countenance
was
not
uncheerful
.
"
Our
dear
Willoughby
is
now
some
miles
from
Barton
,
Elinor
,
"
said
she
,
as
she
sat
down
to
work
,
"
and
with
how
heavy
a
heart
does
he
travel
?
"
"
It
is
all
very
strange
.
So
suddenly
to
be
gone
!
It
seems
but
the
work
of
a
moment
.
And
last
night
he
was
with
us
so
happy
,
so
cheerful
,
so
affectionate
?
And
now
,
after
only
ten
minutes
notice
—
Gone
too
without
intending
to
return
!
—
Something
more
than
what
he
owned
to
us
must
have
happened
.
He
did
not
speak
,
he
did
not
behave
like
himself
.
YOU
must
have
seen
the
difference
as
well
as
I
.
What
can
it
be
?
Can
they
have
quarrelled
?
Why
else
should
he
have
shewn
such
unwillingness
to
accept
your
invitation
here
?
"
—
"
It
was
not
inclination
that
he
wanted
,
Elinor
;
I
could
plainly
see
THAT
.
He
had
not
the
power
of
accepting
it
.
I
have
thought
it
all
over
I
assure
you
,
and
I
can
perfectly
account
for
every
thing
that
at
first
seemed
strange
to
me
as
well
as
to
you
.
"
"
Can
you
,
indeed
!
"
"
Yes
.
I
have
explained
it
to
myself
in
the
most
satisfactory
way
;
—
but
you
,
Elinor
,
who
love
to
doubt
where
you
can
—
it
will
not
satisfy
YOU
,
I
know
;
but
you
shall
not
talk
ME
out
of
my
trust
in
it
.
I
am
persuaded
that
Mrs
.
Smith
suspects
his
regard
for
Marianne
,
disapproves
of
it
,
(
perhaps
because
she
has
other
views
for
him
,
)
and
on
that
account
is
eager
to
get
him
away
;
—
and
that
the
business
which
she
sends
him
off
to
transact
is
invented
as
an
excuse
to
dismiss
him
.
This
is
what
I
believe
to
have
happened
.
He
is
,
moreover
,
aware
that
she
DOES
disapprove
the
connection
,
he
dares
not
therefore
at
present
confess
to
her
his
engagement
with
Marianne
,
and
he
feels
himself
obliged
,
from
his
dependent
situation
,
to
give
into
her
schemes
,
and
absent
himself
from
Devonshire
for
a
while
.
You
will
tell
me
,
I
know
,
that
this
may
or
may
NOT
have
happened
;
but
I
will
listen
to
no
cavil
,
unless
you
can
point
out
any
other
method
of
understanding
the
affair
as
satisfactory
at
this
.
And
now
,
Elinor
,
what
have
you
to
say
?
"
"
Nothing
,
for
you
have
anticipated
my
answer
.
"
"
Then
you
would
have
told
me
,
that
it
might
or
might
not
have
happened
.
Oh
,
Elinor
,
how
incomprehensible
are
your
feelings
!
You
had
rather
take
evil
upon
credit
than
good
.
You
had
rather
look
out
for
misery
for
Marianne
,
and
guilt
for
poor
Willoughby
,
than
an
apology
for
the
latter
.
You
are
resolved
to
think
him
blameable
,
because
he
took
leave
of
us
with
less
affection
than
his
usual
behaviour
has
shewn
.
And
is
no
allowance
to
be
made
for
inadvertence
,
or
for
spirits
depressed
by
recent
disappointment
?
Are
no
probabilities
to
be
accepted
,
merely
because
they
are
not
certainties
?
Is
nothing
due
to
the
man
whom
we
have
all
such
reason
to
love
,
and
no
reason
in
the
world
to
think
ill
of
?
To
the
possibility
of
motives
unanswerable
in
themselves
,
though
unavoidably
secret
for
a
while
?
And
,
after
all
,
what
is
it
you
suspect
him
of
?
"
"
I
can
hardly
tell
myself
.
But
suspicion
of
something
unpleasant
is
the
inevitable
consequence
of
such
an
alteration
as
we
just
witnessed
in
him
.