Понятно
Понятно
Для того чтобы воспользоваться закладками, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Отмена
Для того чтобы воспользоваться озвучкой предложений, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Отмена
Озвучка предложений доступна при наличии PRO-доступа
Купить PRO-доступ
Отмена
The
next
morning
brought
the
following
very
unexpected
letter
from
Isabella
:
Bath
,
April
My
dearest
Catherine
,
I
received
your
two
kind
letters
with
the
greatest
delight
,
and
have
a
thousand
apologies
to
make
for
not
answering
them
sooner
.
I
really
am
quite
ashamed
of
my
idleness
;
but
in
this
horrid
place
one
can
find
time
for
nothing
.
I
have
had
my
pen
in
my
hand
to
begin
a
letter
to
you
almost
every
day
since
you
left
Bath
,
but
have
always
been
prevented
by
some
silly
trifler
or
other
.
Pray
write
to
me
soon
,
and
direct
to
my
own
home
.
Thank
God
,
we
leave
this
vile
place
tomorrow
.
Since
you
went
away
,
I
have
had
no
pleasure
in
it
the
dust
is
beyond
anything
;
and
everybody
one
cares
for
is
gone
.
I
believe
if
I
could
see
you
I
should
not
mind
the
rest
,
for
you
are
dearer
to
me
than
anybody
can
conceive
.
I
am
quite
uneasy
about
your
dear
brother
,
not
having
heard
from
him
since
he
went
to
Oxford
;
and
am
fearful
of
some
misunderstanding
.
Your
kind
offices
will
set
all
right
:
he
is
the
only
man
I
ever
did
or
could
love
,
and
I
trust
you
will
convince
him
of
it
.
The
spring
fashions
are
partly
down
;
and
the
hats
the
most
frightful
you
can
imagine
.
I
hope
you
spend
your
time
pleasantly
,
but
am
afraid
you
never
think
of
me
.
I
will
not
say
all
that
I
could
of
the
family
you
are
with
,
because
I
would
not
be
ungenerous
,
or
set
you
against
those
you
esteem
;
but
it
is
very
difficult
to
know
whom
to
trust
,
and
young
men
never
know
their
minds
two
days
together
.
I
rejoice
to
say
that
the
young
man
whom
,
of
all
others
,
I
particularly
abhor
,
has
left
Bath
.
Отключить рекламу
You
will
know
,
from
this
description
,
I
must
mean
Captain
Tilney
,
who
,
as
you
may
remember
,
was
amazingly
disposed
to
follow
and
tease
me
,
before
you
went
away
.
Afterwards
he
got
worse
,
and
became
quite
my
shadow
.
Many
girls
might
have
been
taken
in
,
for
never
were
such
attentions
;
but
I
knew
the
fickle
sex
too
well
.
He
went
away
to
his
regiment
two
days
ago
,
and
I
trust
I
shall
never
be
plagued
with
him
again
.
He
is
the
greatest
coxcomb
I
ever
saw
,
and
amazingly
disagreeable
.
The
last
two
days
he
was
always
by
the
side
of
Charlotte
Davis
:
I
pitied
his
taste
,
but
took
no
notice
of
him
.
The
last
time
we
met
was
in
Bath
Street
,
and
I
turned
directly
into
a
shop
that
he
might
not
speak
to
me
;
I
would
not
even
look
at
him
.
He
went
into
the
pump
-
room
afterwards
;
but
I
would
not
have
followed
him
for
all
the
world
.
Such
a
contrast
between
him
and
your
brother
!
Pray
send
me
some
news
of
the
latter
I
am
quite
unhappy
about
him
;
he
seemed
so
uncomfortable
when
he
went
away
,
with
a
cold
,
or
something
that
affected
his
spirits
.
I
would
write
to
him
myself
,
but
have
mislaid
his
direction
;
and
,
as
I
hinted
above
,
am
afraid
he
took
something
in
my
conduct
amiss
.
Pray
explain
everything
to
his
satisfaction
;
or
,
if
he
still
harbours
any
doubt
,
a
line
from
himself
to
me
,
or
a
call
at
Putney
when
next
in
town
,
might
set
all
to
rights
.
I
have
not
been
to
the
rooms
this
age
,
nor
to
the
play
,
except
going
in
last
night
with
the
Hodges
,
for
a
frolic
,
at
half
price
:
they
teased
me
into
it
;
and
I
was
determined
they
should
not
say
I
shut
myself
up
because
Tilney
was
gone
.
We
happened
to
sit
by
the
Mitchells
,
and
they
pretended
to
be
quite
surprised
to
see
me
out
.
I
knew
their
spite
:
at
one
time
they
could
not
be
civil
to
me
,
but
now
they
are
all
friendship
;
but
I
am
not
such
a
fool
as
to
be
taken
in
by
them
.
You
know
I
have
a
pretty
good
spirit
of
my
own
.
Anne
Mitchell
had
tried
to
put
on
a
turban
like
mine
,
as
I
wore
it
the
week
before
at
the
concert
,
but
made
wretched
work
of
it
it
happened
to
become
my
odd
face
,
I
believe
,
at
least
Tilney
told
me
so
at
the
time
,
and
said
every
eye
was
upon
me
;
but
he
is
the
last
man
whose
word
I
would
take
.
I
wear
nothing
but
purple
now
:
I
know
I
look
hideous
in
it
,
but
no
matter
it
is
your
dear
brother
s
favourite
colour
.
Lose
no
time
,
my
dearest
,
sweetest
Catherine
,
in
writing
to
him
and
to
me
,
Who
ever
am
,
etc
.
Such
a
strain
of
shallow
artifice
could
not
impose
even
upon
Catherine
.
Its
inconsistencies
,
contradictions
,
and
falsehood
struck
her
from
the
very
first
.
She
was
ashamed
of
Isabella
,
and
ashamed
of
having
ever
loved
her
.
Her
professions
of
attachment
were
now
as
disgusting
as
her
excuses
were
empty
,
and
her
demands
impudent
.
Write
to
James
on
her
behalf
!
No
,
James
should
never
hear
Isabella
s
name
mentioned
by
her
again
.
On
Henry
s
arrival
from
Woodston
,
she
made
known
to
him
and
Eleanor
their
brother
s
safety
,
congratulating
them
with
sincerity
on
it
,
and
reading
aloud
the
most
material
passages
of
her
letter
with
strong
indignation
.
Отключить рекламу
When
she
had
finished
it
So
much
for
Isabella
,
she
cried
,
and
for
all
our
intimacy
!
She
must
think
me
an
idiot
,
or
she
could
not
have
written
so
;
but
perhaps
this
has
served
to
make
her
character
better
known
to
me
than
mine
is
to
her
.
I
see
what
she
has
been
about
.
She
is
a
vain
coquette
,
and
her
tricks
have
not
answered
.
I
do
not
believe
she
had
ever
any
regard
either
for
James
or
for
me
,
and
I
wish
I
had
never
known
her
.
It
will
soon
be
as
if
you
never
had
,
said
Henry
.
There
is
but
one
thing
that
I
cannot
understand
.
I
see
that
she
has
had
designs
on
Captain
Tilney
,
which
have
not
succeeded
;
but
I
do
not
understand
what
Captain
Tilney
has
been
about
all
this
time
.
Why
should
he
pay
her
such
attentions
as
to
make
her
quarrel
with
my
brother
,
and
then
fly
off
himself
?