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- Стр. 184/221
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"
I
begin
to
be
sorry
that
he
comes
at
all
,
"
said
Jane
to
her
sister
.
"
It
would
be
nothing
;
I
could
see
him
with
perfect
indifference
,
but
I
can
hardly
bear
to
hear
it
thus
perpetually
talked
of
.
My
mother
means
well
;
but
she
does
not
know
,
no
one
can
know
,
how
much
I
suffer
from
what
she
says
.
Happy
shall
I
be
,
when
his
stay
at
Netherfield
is
over
!
"
"
I
wish
I
could
say
anything
to
comfort
you
,
"
replied
Elizabeth
;
"
but
it
is
wholly
out
of
my
power
.
You
must
feel
it
;
and
the
usual
satisfaction
of
preaching
patience
to
a
sufferer
is
denied
me
,
because
you
have
always
so
much
.
"
Mr.
Bingley
arrived
.
Mrs.
Bennet
,
through
the
assistance
of
servants
,
contrived
to
have
the
earliest
tidings
of
it
,
that
the
period
of
anxiety
and
fretfulness
on
her
side
might
be
as
long
as
it
could
.
She
counted
the
days
that
must
intervene
before
their
invitation
could
be
sent
;
hopeless
of
seeing
him
before
.
But
on
the
third
morning
after
his
arrival
in
Hertfordshire
,
she
saw
him
,
from
her
dressing-room
window
,
enter
the
paddock
and
ride
towards
the
house
.
Her
daughters
were
eagerly
called
to
partake
of
her
joy
.
Jane
resolutely
kept
her
place
at
the
table
;
but
Elizabeth
,
to
satisfy
her
mother
,
went
to
the
window
--
she
looked
--
she
saw
Mr.
Darcy
with
him
,
and
sat
down
again
by
her
sister
.
"
There
is
a
gentleman
with
him
,
mamma
,
"
said
Kitty
;
"
who
can
it
be
?
"
"
Some
acquaintance
or
other
,
my
dear
,
I
suppose
;
I
am
sure
I
do
not
know
.
"
"
La
!
"
replied
Kitty
,
"
it
looks
just
like
that
man
that
used
to
be
with
him
before
.
Mr.
what
's
-
his-name
.
That
tall
,
proud
man
.
"
"
Good
gracious
!
Mr.
Darcy
!
--
and
so
it
does
,
I
vow
.
Well
,
any
friend
of
Mr.
Bingley
's
will
always
be
welcome
here
,
to
be
sure
;
but
else
I
must
say
that
I
hate
the
very
sight
of
him
.
"
Jane
looked
at
Elizabeth
with
surprise
and
concern
.
She
knew
but
little
of
their
meeting
in
Derbyshire
,
and
therefore
felt
for
the
awkwardness
which
must
attend
her
sister
,
in
seeing
him
almost
for
the
first
time
after
receiving
his
explanatory
letter
.
Both
sisters
were
uncomfortable
enough
.
Each
felt
for
the
other
,
and
of
course
for
themselves
;
and
their
mother
talked
on
,
of
her
dislike
of
Mr.
Darcy
,
and
her
resolution
to
be
civil
to
him
only
as
Mr.
Bingley
's
friend
,
without
being
heard
by
either
of
them
.
But
Elizabeth
had
sources
of
uneasiness
which
could
not
be
suspected
by
Jane
,
to
whom
she
had
never
yet
had
courage
to
shew
Mrs.
Gardiner
's
letter
,
or
to
relate
her
own
change
of
sentiment
towards
him
.
To
Jane
,
he
could
be
only
a
man
whose
proposals
she
had
refused
,
and
whose
merit
she
had
undervalued
;
but
to
her
own
more
extensive
information
,
he
was
the
person
to
whom
the
whole
family
were
indebted
for
the
first
of
benefits
,
and
whom
she
regarded
herself
with
an
interest
,
if
not
quite
so
tender
,
at
least
as
reasonable
and
just
as
what
Jane
felt
for
Bingley
.
Her
astonishment
at
his
coming
--
at
his
coming
to
Netherfield
,
to
Longbourn
,
and
voluntarily
seeking
her
again
,
was
almost
equal
to
what
she
had
known
on
first
witnessing
his
altered
behaviour
in
Derbyshire
.