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- Гордость и предубеждение
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- Стр. 209/221
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"
I
can
easily
believe
it
.
You
thought
me
then
devoid
of
every
proper
feeling
,
I
am
sure
you
did
.
The
turn
of
your
countenance
I
shall
never
forget
,
as
you
said
that
I
could
not
have
addressed
you
in
any
possible
way
that
would
induce
you
to
accept
me
.
"
"
Oh
!
do
not
repeat
what
I
then
said
.
These
recollections
will
not
do
at
all
.
I
assure
you
that
I
have
long
been
most
heartily
ashamed
of
it
.
"
Darcy
mentioned
his
letter
.
"
Did
it
,
"
said
he
,
"
did
it
soon
make
you
think
better
of
me
?
Did
you
,
on
reading
it
,
give
any
credit
to
its
contents
?
"
She
explained
what
its
effect
on
her
had
been
,
and
how
gradually
all
her
former
prejudices
had
been
removed
.
"
I
knew
,
"
said
he
,
"
that
what
I
wrote
must
give
you
pain
,
but
it
was
necessary
.
I
hope
you
have
destroyed
the
letter
.
There
was
one
part
especially
,
the
opening
of
it
,
which
I
should
dread
your
having
the
power
of
reading
again
.
I
can
remember
some
expressions
which
might
justly
make
you
hate
me
.
"
"
The
letter
shall
certainly
be
burnt
,
if
you
believe
it
essential
to
the
preservation
of
my
regard
;
but
,
though
we
have
both
reason
to
think
my
opinions
not
entirely
unalterable
,
they
are
not
,
I
hope
,
quite
so
easily
changed
as
that
implies
.
"
"
When
I
wrote
that
letter
,
"
replied
Darcy
,
"
I
believed
myself
perfectly
calm
and
cool
,
but
I
am
since
convinced
that
it
was
written
in
a
dreadful
bitterness
of
spirit
.
"
"
The
letter
,
perhaps
,
began
in
bitterness
,
but
it
did
not
end
so
.
The
adieu
is
charity
itself
.
But
think
no
more
of
the
letter
.
The
feelings
of
the
person
who
wrote
,
and
the
person
who
received
it
,
are
now
so
widely
different
from
what
they
were
then
,
that
every
unpleasant
circumstance
attending
it
ought
to
be
forgotten
.
You
must
learn
some
of
my
philosophy
.
Think
only
of
the
past
as
its
remembrance
gives
you
pleasure
.
"
"
I
can
not
give
you
credit
for
any
philosophy
of
the
kind
.
Your
retrospections
must
be
so
totally
void
of
reproach
,
that
the
contentment
arising
from
them
is
not
of
philosophy
,
but
,
what
is
much
better
,
of
innocence
.
But
with
me
,
it
is
not
so
.
Painful
recollections
will
intrude
which
can
not
,
which
ought
not
,
to
be
repelled
.
I
have
been
a
selfish
being
all
my
life
,
in
practice
,
though
not
in
principle
.
As
a
child
I
was
taught
what
was
right
,
but
I
was
not
taught
to
correct
my
temper
.
I
was
given
good
principles
,
but
left
to
follow
them
in
pride
and
conceit
.
Unfortunately
an
only
son
(
for
many
years
an
only
child
)
,
I
was
spoilt
by
my
parents
,
who
,
though
good
themselves
(
my
father
,
particularly
,
all
that
was
benevolent
and
amiable
)
,
allowed
,
encouraged
,
almost
taught
me
to
be
selfish
and
overbearing
;
to
care
for
none
beyond
my
own
family
circle
;
to
think
meanly
of
all
the
rest
of
the
world
;
to
wish
at
least
to
think
meanly
of
their
sense
and
worth
compared
with
my
own
.
Such
I
was
,
from
eight
to
eight
and
twenty
;
and
such
I
might
still
have
been
but
for
you
,
dearest
,
loveliest
Elizabeth
!
What
do
I
not
owe
you
!
You
taught
me
a
lesson
,
hard
indeed
at
first
,
but
most
advantageous
.
By
you
,
I
was
properly
humbled
.
I
came
to
you
without
a
doubt
of
my
reception
.
You
showed
me
how
insufficient
were
all
my
pretensions
to
please
a
woman
worthy
of
being
pleased
.
"