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- Гордость и предубеждение
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- Стр. 114/221
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"
And
of
your
infliction
,
"
cried
Elizabeth
with
energy
.
"
You
have
reduced
him
to
his
present
state
of
poverty
--
comparative
poverty
.
You
have
withheld
the
advantages
which
you
must
know
to
have
been
designed
for
him
.
You
have
deprived
the
best
years
of
his
life
of
that
independence
which
was
no
less
his
due
than
his
desert
.
You
have
done
all
this
!
and
yet
you
can
treat
the
mention
of
his
misfortune
with
contempt
and
ridicule
.
"
"
And
this
,
"
cried
Darcy
,
as
he
walked
with
quick
steps
across
the
room
,
"
is
your
opinion
of
me
!
This
is
the
estimation
in
which
you
hold
me
!
I
thank
you
for
explaining
it
so
fully
.
My
faults
,
according
to
this
calculation
,
are
heavy
indeed
!
But
perhaps
,
"
added
he
,
stopping
in
his
walk
,
and
turning
towards
her
,
"
these
offenses
might
have
been
overlooked
,
had
not
your
pride
been
hurt
by
my
honest
confession
of
the
scruples
that
had
long
prevented
my
forming
any
serious
design
.
These
bitter
accusations
might
have
been
suppressed
,
had
I
,
with
greater
policy
,
concealed
my
struggles
,
and
flattered
you
into
the
belief
of
my
being
impelled
by
unqualified
,
unalloyed
inclination
;
by
reason
,
by
reflection
,
by
everything
.
But
disguise
of
every
sort
is
my
abhorrence
.
Nor
am
I
ashamed
of
the
feelings
I
related
.
They
were
natural
and
just
.
Could
you
expect
me
to
rejoice
in
the
inferiority
of
your
connections
?
--
to
congratulate
myself
on
the
hope
of
relations
,
whose
condition
in
life
is
so
decidedly
beneath
my
own
?
"
Elizabeth
felt
herself
growing
more
angry
every
moment
;
yet
she
tried
to
the
utmost
to
speak
with
composure
when
she
said
:
"
You
are
mistaken
,
Mr.
Darcy
,
if
you
suppose
that
the
mode
of
your
declaration
affected
me
in
any
other
way
,
than
as
it
spared
the
concern
which
I
might
have
felt
in
refusing
you
,
had
you
behaved
in
a
more
gentlemanlike
manner
.
"
She
saw
him
start
at
this
,
but
he
said
nothing
,
and
she
continued
:
"
You
could
not
have
made
the
offer
of
your
hand
in
any
possible
way
that
would
have
tempted
me
to
accept
it
.
"
Again
his
astonishment
was
obvious
;
and
he
looked
at
her
with
an
expression
of
mingled
incredulity
and
mortification
.
She
went
on
:
"
From
the
very
beginning
--
from
the
first
moment
,
I
may
almost
say
--
of
my
acquaintance
with
you
,
your
manners
,
impressing
me
with
the
fullest
belief
of
your
arrogance
,
your
conceit
,
and
your
selfish
disdain
of
the
feelings
of
others
,
were
such
as
to
form
the
groundwork
of
disapprobation
on
which
succeeding
events
have
built
so
immovable
a
dislike
;
and
I
had
not
known
you
a
month
before
I
felt
that
you
were
the
last
man
in
the
world
whom
I
could
ever
be
prevailed
on
to
marry
.
"
"
You
have
said
quite
enough
,
madam
.
I
perfectly
comprehend
your
feelings
,
and
have
now
only
to
be
ashamed
of
what
my
own
have
been
.
Forgive
me
for
having
taken
up
so
much
of
your
time
,
and
accept
my
best
wishes
for
your
health
and
happiness
.
"
And
with
these
words
he
hastily
left
the
room
,
and
Elizabeth
heard
him
the
next
moment
open
the
front
door
and
quit
the
house
.