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821
I
wish
your
heart
were
independent
.
That
would
be
enough
for
me
.
822
My
heart
,
indeed
!
What
can
you
have
to
do
with
hearts
?
You
men
have
none
of
you
any
hearts
.
823
If
we
have
not
hearts
,
we
have
eyes
;
and
they
give
us
torment
enough
.
Отключить рекламу
824
Do
they
?
I
am
sorry
for
it
;
I
am
sorry
they
find
anything
so
disagreeable
in
me
.
I
will
look
another
way
.
I
hope
this
pleases
you
(
turning
her
back
on
him
)
;
I
hope
your
eyes
are
not
tormented
now
.
825
Never
more
so
;
for
the
edge
of
a
blooming
cheek
is
still
in
view
at
once
too
much
and
too
little
.
826
Catherine
heard
all
this
,
and
quite
out
of
countenance
,
could
listen
no
longer
.
Amazed
that
Isabella
could
endure
it
,
and
jealous
for
her
brother
,
she
rose
up
,
and
saying
she
should
join
Mrs
.
Allen
,
proposed
their
walking
.
827
But
for
this
Isabella
showed
no
inclination
.
She
was
so
amazingly
tired
,
and
it
was
so
odious
to
parade
about
the
pump
-
room
;
and
if
she
moved
from
her
seat
she
should
miss
her
sisters
;
she
was
expecting
her
sisters
every
moment
;
so
that
her
dearest
Catherine
must
excuse
her
,
and
must
sit
quietly
down
again
.
But
Catherine
could
be
stubborn
too
;
and
Mrs
.
Allen
just
then
coming
up
to
propose
their
returning
home
,
she
joined
her
and
walked
out
of
the
pump
-
room
,
leaving
Isabella
still
sitting
with
Captain
Tilney
.
With
much
uneasiness
did
she
thus
leave
them
.
It
seemed
to
her
that
Captain
Tilney
was
falling
in
love
with
Isabella
,
and
Isabella
unconsciously
encouraging
him
;
unconsciously
it
must
be
,
for
Isabella
s
attachment
to
James
was
as
certain
and
well
acknowledged
as
her
engagement
.
To
doubt
her
truth
or
good
intentions
was
impossible
;
and
yet
,
during
the
whole
of
their
conversation
her
manner
had
been
odd
.
She
wished
Isabella
had
talked
more
like
her
usual
self
,
and
not
so
much
about
money
,
and
had
not
looked
so
well
pleased
at
the
sight
of
Captain
Tilney
.
How
strange
that
she
should
not
perceive
his
admiration
!
Catherine
longed
to
give
her
a
hint
of
it
,
to
put
her
on
her
guard
,
and
prevent
all
the
pain
which
her
too
lively
behaviour
might
otherwise
create
both
for
him
and
her
brother
.
Отключить рекламу
828
The
compliment
of
John
Thorpe
s
affection
did
not
make
amends
for
this
thoughtlessness
in
his
sister
829
She
was
almost
as
far
from
believing
as
from
wishing
it
to
be
sincere
;
for
she
had
not
forgotten
that
he
could
mistake
,
and
his
assertion
of
the
offer
and
of
her
encouragement
convinced
her
that
his
mistakes
could
sometimes
be
very
egregious
.
In
vanity
,
therefore
,
she
gained
but
little
;
her
chief
profit
was
in
wonder
.
That
he
should
think
it
worth
his
while
to
fancy
himself
in
love
with
her
was
a
matter
of
lively
astonishment
.
Isabella
talked
of
his
attentions
;
she
had
never
been
sensible
of
any
;
but
Isabella
had
said
many
things
which
she
hoped
had
been
spoken
in
haste
,
and
would
never
be
said
again
;
and
upon
this
she
was
glad
to
rest
altogether
for
present
ease
and
comfort
.
830
A
few
days
passed
away
,
and
Catherine
,
though
not
allowing
herself
to
suspect
her
friend
,
could
not
help
watching
her
closely
.
The
result
of
her
observations
was
not
agreeable
.
Isabella
seemed
an
altered
creature
.
When
she
saw
her
,
indeed
,
surrounded
only
by
their
immediate
friends
in
Edgar
s
Buildings
or
Pulteney
Street
,
her
change
of
manners
was
so
trifling
that
,
had
it
gone
no
farther
,
it
might
have
passed
unnoticed
.
A
something
of
languid
indifference
,
or
of
that
boasted
absence
of
mind
which
Catherine
had
never
heard
of
before
,
would
occasionally
come
across
her
;
but
had
nothing
worse
appeared
,
that
might
only
have
spread
a
new
grace
and
inspired
a
warmer
interest
.
But
when
Catherine
saw
her
in
public
,
admitting
Captain
Tilney
s
attentions
as
readily
as
they
were
offered
,
and
allowing
him
almost
an
equal
share
with
James
in
her
notice
and
smiles
,
the
alteration
became
too
positive
to
be
passed
over
.
What
could
be
meant
by
such
unsteady
conduct
,
what
her
friend
could
be
at
,
was
beyond
her
comprehension
.
Isabella
could
not
be
aware
of
the
pain
she
was
inflicting
;
but
it
was
a
degree
of
wilful
thoughtlessness
which
Catherine
could
not
but
resent
.
James
was
the
sufferer
.
She
saw
him
grave
and
uneasy
;
and
however
careless
of
his
present
comfort
the
woman
might
be
who
had
given
him
her
heart
,
to
her
it
was
always
an
object
.
For
poor
Captain
Tilney
too
she
was
greatly
concerned
.