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Catherine
hoped
so
too
,
and
tried
to
feel
an
interest
in
her
own
amendment
,
but
her
spirits
were
quite
worn
down
;
and
,
to
be
silent
and
alone
becoming
soon
her
only
wish
,
she
readily
agreed
to
her
mother
s
next
counsel
of
going
early
to
bed
.
Her
parents
,
seeing
nothing
in
her
ill
looks
and
agitation
but
the
natural
consequence
of
mortified
feelings
,
and
of
the
unusual
exertion
and
fatigue
of
such
a
journey
,
parted
from
her
without
any
doubt
of
their
being
soon
slept
away
;
and
though
,
when
they
all
met
the
next
morning
,
her
recovery
was
not
equal
to
their
hopes
,
they
were
still
perfectly
unsuspicious
of
there
being
any
deeper
evil
.
They
never
once
thought
of
her
heart
,
which
,
for
the
parents
of
a
young
lady
of
seventeen
,
just
returned
from
her
first
excursion
from
home
,
was
odd
enough
!
As
soon
as
breakfast
was
over
,
she
sat
down
to
fulfil
her
promise
to
Miss
Tilney
,
whose
trust
in
the
effect
of
time
and
distance
on
her
friend
s
disposition
was
already
justified
,
for
already
did
Catherine
reproach
herself
with
having
parted
from
Eleanor
coldly
,
with
having
never
enough
valued
her
merits
or
kindness
,
and
never
enough
commiserated
her
for
what
she
had
been
yesterday
left
to
endure
.
The
strength
of
these
feelings
,
however
,
was
far
from
assisting
her
pen
;
and
never
had
it
been
harder
for
her
to
write
than
in
addressing
Eleanor
Tilney
.
To
compose
a
letter
which
might
at
once
do
justice
to
her
sentiments
and
her
situation
,
convey
gratitude
without
servile
regret
,
be
guarded
without
coldness
,
and
honest
without
resentment
a
letter
which
Eleanor
might
not
be
pained
by
the
perusal
of
and
,
above
all
,
which
she
might
not
blush
herself
,
if
Henry
should
chance
to
see
,
was
an
undertaking
to
frighten
away
all
her
powers
of
performance
;
and
,
after
long
thought
and
much
perplexity
,
to
be
very
brief
was
all
that
she
could
determine
on
with
any
confidence
of
safety
.
The
money
therefore
which
Eleanor
had
advanced
was
enclosed
with
little
more
than
grateful
thanks
,
and
the
thousand
good
wishes
of
a
most
affectionate
heart
.
Отключить рекламу
This
has
been
a
strange
acquaintance
,
observed
Mrs
.
Morland
,
as
the
letter
was
finished
;
soon
made
and
soon
ended
.
I
am
sorry
it
happens
so
,
for
Mrs
.
Allen
thought
them
very
pretty
kind
of
young
people
;
and
you
were
sadly
out
of
luck
too
in
your
Isabella
.
Ah
!
Poor
James
!
Well
,
we
must
live
and
learn
;
and
the
next
new
friends
you
make
I
hope
will
be
better
worth
keeping
.
Catherine
coloured
as
she
warmly
answered
,
No
friend
can
be
better
worth
keeping
than
Eleanor
.
If
so
,
my
dear
,
I
dare
say
you
will
meet
again
some
time
or
other
;
do
not
be
uneasy
.
It
is
ten
to
one
but
you
are
thrown
together
again
in
the
course
of
a
few
years
;
and
then
what
a
pleasure
it
will
be
!
Mrs
.
Morland
was
not
happy
in
her
attempt
at
consolation
.
Отключить рекламу
The
hope
of
meeting
again
in
the
course
of
a
few
years
could
only
put
into
Catherine
s
head
what
might
happen
within
that
time
to
make
a
meeting
dreadful
to
her
.
She
could
never
forget
Henry
Tilney
,
or
think
of
him
with
less
tenderness
than
she
did
at
that
moment
;
but
he
might
forget
her
;
and
in
that
case
,
to
meet
!
Her
eyes
filled
with
tears
as
she
pictured
her
acquaintance
so
renewed
;
and
her
mother
,
perceiving
her
comfortable
suggestions
to
have
had
no
good
effect
,
proposed
,
as
another
expedient
for
restoring
her
spirits
,
that
they
should
call
on
Mrs
.
Allen
.
The
two
houses
were
only
a
quarter
of
a
mile
apart
;
and
,
as
they
walked
,
Mrs
.
Morland
quickly
dispatched
all
that
she
felt
on
the
score
of
James
s
disappointment
.
We
are
sorry
for
him
,
said
she
;
but
otherwise
there
is
no
harm
done
in
the
match
going
off
;
for
it
could
not
be
a
desirable
thing
to
have
him
engaged
to
a
girl
whom
we
had
not
the
smallest
acquaintance
with
,
and
who
was
so
entirely
without
fortune
;
and
now
,
after
such
behaviour
,
we
cannot
think
at
all
well
of
her
.
Just
at
present
it
comes
hard
to
poor
James
;
but
that
will
not
last
forever
;
and
I
dare
say
he
will
be
a
discreeter
man
all
his
life
,
for
the
foolishness
of
his
first
choice
.
This
was
just
such
a
summary
view
of
the
affair
as
Catherine
could
listen
to
;
another
sentence
might
have
endangered
her
complaisance
,
and
made
her
reply
less
rational
;
for
soon
were
all
her
thinking
powers
swallowed
up
in
the
reflection
of
her
own
change
of
feelings
and
spirits
since
last
she
had
trodden
that
well
-
known
road
.