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"
Indeed
you
are
mistaken
.
I
have
no
such
injuries
to
resent
.
It
is
not
of
particular
,
but
of
general
evils
,
which
I
am
now
complaining
.
Our
importance
,
our
respectability
in
the
world
must
be
affected
by
the
wild
volatility
,
the
assurance
and
disdain
of
all
restraint
which
mark
Lydia
's
character
.
Excuse
me
,
for
I
must
speak
plainly
.
If
you
,
my
dear
father
,
will
not
take
the
trouble
of
checking
her
exuberant
spirits
,
and
of
teaching
her
that
her
present
pursuits
are
not
to
be
the
business
of
her
life
,
she
will
soon
be
beyond
the
reach
of
amendment
.
Her
character
will
be
fixed
,
and
she
will
,
at
sixteen
,
be
the
most
determined
flirt
that
ever
made
herself
or
her
family
ridiculous
;
a
flirt
,
too
,
in
the
worst
and
meanest
degree
of
flirtation
;
without
any
attraction
beyond
youth
and
a
tolerable
person
;
and
,
from
the
ignorance
and
emptiness
of
her
mind
,
wholly
unable
to
ward
off
any
portion
of
that
universal
contempt
which
her
rage
for
admiration
will
excite
.
In
this
danger
Kitty
also
is
comprehended
.
She
will
follow
wherever
Lydia
leads
.
Vain
,
ignorant
,
idle
,
and
absolutely
uncontrolled
!
Oh
!
my
dear
father
,
can
you
suppose
it
possible
that
they
will
not
be
censured
and
despised
wherever
they
are
known
,
and
that
their
sisters
will
not
be
often
involved
in
the
disgrace
?
"
Mr.
Bennet
saw
that
her
whole
heart
was
in
the
subject
,
and
affectionately
taking
her
hand
said
in
reply
:
Отключить рекламу
"
Do
not
make
yourself
uneasy
,
my
love
.
Wherever
you
and
Jane
are
known
you
must
be
respected
and
valued
;
and
you
will
not
appear
to
less
advantage
for
having
a
couple
of
--
or
I
may
say
,
three
--
very
silly
sisters
.
We
shall
have
no
peace
at
Longbourn
if
Lydia
does
not
go
to
Brighton
.
Let
her
go
,
then
.
Colonel
Forster
is
a
sensible
man
,
and
will
keep
her
out
of
any
real
mischief
;
and
she
is
luckily
too
poor
to
be
an
object
of
prey
to
anybody
.
At
Brighton
she
will
be
of
less
importance
even
as
a
common
flirt
than
she
has
been
here
.
The
officers
will
find
women
better
worth
their
notice
.
Let
us
hope
,
therefore
,
that
her
being
there
may
teach
her
her
own
insignificance
.
At
any
rate
,
she
can
not
grow
many
degrees
worse
,
without
authorising
us
to
lock
her
up
for
the
rest
of
her
life
.
"
With
this
answer
Elizabeth
was
forced
to
be
content
;
but
her
own
opinion
continued
the
same
,
and
she
left
him
disappointed
and
sorry
.
It
was
not
in
her
nature
,
however
,
to
increase
her
vexations
by
dwelling
on
them
.
She
was
confident
of
having
performed
her
duty
,
and
to
fret
over
unavoidable
evils
,
or
augment
them
by
anxiety
,
was
no
part
of
her
disposition
.
Had
Lydia
and
her
mother
known
the
substance
of
her
conference
with
her
father
,
their
indignation
would
hardly
have
found
expression
in
their
united
volubility
.
In
Lydia
's
imagination
,
a
visit
to
Brighton
comprised
every
possibility
of
earthly
happiness
.
She
saw
,
with
the
creative
eye
of
fancy
,
the
streets
of
that
gay
bathing-place
covered
with
officers
.
She
saw
herself
the
object
of
attention
,
to
tens
and
to
scores
of
them
at
present
unknown
.
She
saw
all
the
glories
of
the
camp
--
its
tents
stretched
forth
in
beauteous
uniformity
of
lines
,
crowded
with
the
young
and
the
gay
,
and
dazzling
with
scarlet
;
and
,
to
complete
the
view
,
she
saw
herself
seated
beneath
a
tent
,
tenderly
flirting
with
at
least
six
officers
at
once
.
Had
she
known
her
sister
sought
to
tear
her
from
such
prospects
and
such
realities
as
these
,
what
would
have
been
her
sensations
?
They
could
have
been
understood
only
by
her
mother
,
who
might
have
felt
nearly
the
same
.
Lydia
's
going
to
Brighton
was
all
that
consoled
her
for
her
melancholy
conviction
of
her
husband
's
never
intending
to
go
there
himself
.
Отключить рекламу
But
they
were
entirely
ignorant
of
what
had
passed
;
and
their
raptures
continued
,
with
little
intermission
,
to
the
very
day
of
Lydia
's
leaving
home
.
Elizabeth
was
now
to
see
Mr.
Wickham
for
the
last
time
.
Having
been
frequently
in
company
with
him
since
her
return
,
agitation
was
pretty
well
over
;
the
agitations
of
formal
partiality
entirely
so
.
She
had
even
learnt
to
detect
,
in
the
very
gentleness
which
had
first
delighted
her
,
an
affectation
and
a
sameness
to
disgust
and
weary
.
In
his
present
behaviour
to
herself
,
moreover
,
she
had
a
fresh
source
of
displeasure
,
for
the
inclination
he
soon
testified
of
renewing
those
intentions
which
had
marked
the
early
part
of
their
acquaintance
could
only
serve
,
after
what
had
since
passed
,
to
provoke
her
.
She
lost
all
concern
for
him
in
finding
herself
thus
selected
as
the
object
of
such
idle
and
frivolous
gallantry
;
and
while
she
steadily
repressed
it
,
could
not
but
feel
the
reproof
contained
in
his
believing
,
that
however
long
,
and
for
whatever
cause
,
his
attentions
had
been
withdrawn
,
her
vanity
would
be
gratified
,
and
her
preference
secured
at
any
time
by
their
renewal
.