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The
good
news
spread
quickly
through
the
house
,
and
with
proportionate
speed
through
the
neighbourhood
.
It
was
borne
in
the
latter
with
decent
philosophy
.
To
be
sure
,
it
would
have
been
more
for
the
advantage
of
conversation
had
Miss
Lydia
Bennet
come
upon
the
town
;
or
,
as
the
happiest
alternative
,
been
secluded
from
the
world
,
in
some
distant
farmhouse
.
But
there
was
much
to
be
talked
of
in
marrying
her
;
and
the
good-natured
wishes
for
her
well-doing
which
had
proceeded
before
from
all
the
spiteful
old
ladies
in
Meryton
lost
but
a
little
of
their
spirit
in
this
change
of
circumstances
,
because
with
such
an
husband
her
misery
was
considered
certain
.
It
was
a
fortnight
since
Mrs.
Bennet
had
been
downstairs
;
but
on
this
happy
day
she
again
took
her
seat
at
the
head
of
her
table
,
and
in
spirits
oppressively
high
.
No
sentiment
of
shame
gave
a
damp
to
her
triumph
.
The
marriage
of
a
daughter
,
which
had
been
the
first
object
of
her
wishes
since
Jane
was
sixteen
,
was
now
on
the
point
of
accomplishment
,
and
her
thoughts
and
her
words
ran
wholly
on
those
attendants
of
elegant
nuptials
,
fine
muslins
,
new
carriages
,
and
servants
.
She
was
busily
searching
through
the
neighbourhood
for
a
proper
situation
for
her
daughter
,
and
,
without
knowing
or
considering
what
their
income
might
be
,
rejected
many
as
deficient
in
size
and
importance
.
"
Haye
Park
might
do
,
"
said
she
,
"
if
the
Gouldings
could
quit
it
--
or
the
great
house
at
Stoke
,
if
the
drawing-room
were
larger
;
but
Ashworth
is
too
far
off
!
I
could
not
bear
to
have
her
ten
miles
from
me
;
and
as
for
Pulvis
Lodge
,
the
attics
are
dreadful
.
"
Отключить рекламу
Her
husband
allowed
her
to
talk
on
without
interruption
while
the
servants
remained
.
But
when
they
had
withdrawn
,
he
said
to
her
:
"
Mrs.
Bennet
,
before
you
take
any
or
all
of
these
houses
for
your
son
and
daughter
,
let
us
come
to
a
right
understanding
.
Into
one
house
in
this
neighbourhood
they
shall
never
have
admittance
.
I
will
not
encourage
the
impudence
of
either
,
by
receiving
them
at
Longbourn
.
"
A
long
dispute
followed
this
declaration
;
but
Mr.
Bennet
was
firm
.
It
soon
led
to
another
;
and
Mrs.
Bennet
found
,
with
amazement
and
horror
,
that
her
husband
would
not
advance
a
guinea
to
buy
clothes
for
his
daughter
.
He
protested
that
she
should
receive
from
him
no
mark
of
affection
whatever
on
the
occasion
.
Mrs.
Bennet
could
hardly
comprehend
it
.
That
his
anger
could
be
carried
to
such
a
point
of
inconceivable
resentment
as
to
refuse
his
daughter
a
privilege
without
which
her
marriage
would
scarcely
seem
valid
,
exceeded
all
she
could
believe
possible
.
She
was
more
alive
to
the
disgrace
which
her
want
of
new
clothes
must
reflect
on
her
daughter
's
nuptials
,
than
to
any
sense
of
shame
at
her
eloping
and
living
with
Wickham
a
fortnight
before
they
took
place
.
Elizabeth
was
now
most
heartily
sorry
that
she
had
,
from
the
distress
of
the
moment
,
been
led
to
make
Mr.
Darcy
acquainted
with
their
fears
for
her
sister
;
for
since
her
marriage
would
so
shortly
give
the
proper
termination
to
the
elopement
,
they
might
hope
to
conceal
its
unfavourable
beginning
from
all
those
who
were
not
immediately
on
the
spot
.
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She
had
no
fear
of
its
spreading
farther
through
his
means
.
There
were
few
people
on
whose
secrecy
she
would
have
more
confidently
depended
;
but
,
at
the
same
time
,
there
was
no
one
whose
knowledge
of
a
sister
's
frailty
would
have
mortified
her
so
much
--
not
,
however
,
from
any
fear
of
disadvantage
from
it
individually
to
herself
,
for
,
at
any
rate
,
there
seemed
a
gulf
impassable
between
them
.
Had
Lydia
's
marriage
been
concluded
on
the
most
honourable
terms
,
it
was
not
to
be
supposed
that
Mr.
Darcy
would
connect
himself
with
a
family
where
,
to
every
other
objection
,
would
now
be
added
an
alliance
and
relationship
of
the
nearest
kind
with
a
man
whom
he
so
justly
scorned
.
From
such
a
connection
she
could
not
wonder
that
he
would
shrink
.
The
wish
of
procuring
her
regard
,
which
she
had
assured
herself
of
his
feeling
in
Derbyshire
,
could
not
in
rational
expectation
survive
such
a
blow
as
this
.
She
was
humbled
,
she
was
grieved
;
she
repented
,
though
she
hardly
knew
of
what
.
She
became
jealous
of
his
esteem
,
when
she
could
no
longer
hope
to
be
benefited
by
it
.
She
wanted
to
hear
of
him
,
when
there
seemed
the
least
chance
of
gaining
intelligence
.
She
was
convinced
that
she
could
have
been
happy
with
him
,
when
it
was
no
longer
likely
they
should
meet
.
What
a
triumph
for
him
,
as
she
often
thought
,
could
he
know
that
the
proposals
which
she
had
proudly
spurned
only
four
months
ago
,
would
now
have
been
most
gladly
and
gratefully
received
!
He
was
as
generous
,
she
doubted
not
,
as
the
most
generous
of
his
sex
;
but
while
he
was
mortal
,
there
must
be
a
triumph
.