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- Гордость и предубеждение
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- Стр. 38/221
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"
To
yield
without
conviction
is
no
compliment
to
the
understanding
of
either
.
"
"
You
appear
to
me
,
Mr.
Darcy
,
to
allow
nothing
for
the
influence
of
friendship
and
affection
.
A
regard
for
the
requester
would
often
make
one
readily
yield
to
a
request
,
without
waiting
for
arguments
to
reason
one
into
it
.
I
am
not
particularly
speaking
of
such
a
case
as
you
have
supposed
about
Mr.
Bingley
.
We
may
as
well
wait
,
perhaps
,
till
the
circumstance
occurs
before
we
discuss
the
discretion
of
his
behaviour
thereupon
.
But
in
general
and
ordinary
cases
between
friend
and
friend
,
where
one
of
them
is
desired
by
the
other
to
change
a
resolution
of
no
very
great
moment
,
should
you
think
ill
of
that
person
for
complying
with
the
desire
,
without
waiting
to
be
argued
into
it
?
"
"
Will
it
not
be
advisable
,
before
we
proceed
on
this
subject
,
to
arrange
with
rather
more
precision
the
degree
of
importance
which
is
to
appertain
to
this
request
,
as
well
as
the
degree
of
intimacy
subsisting
between
the
parties
?
"
"
By
all
means
,
"
cried
Bingley
;
"
let
us
hear
all
the
particulars
,
not
forgetting
their
comparative
height
and
size
;
for
that
will
have
more
weight
in
the
argument
,
Miss
Bennet
,
than
you
may
be
aware
of
.
I
assure
you
,
that
if
Darcy
were
not
such
a
great
tall
fellow
,
in
comparison
with
myself
,
I
should
not
pay
him
half
so
much
deference
.
I
declare
I
do
not
know
a
more
awful
object
than
Darcy
,
on
particular
occasions
,
and
in
particular
places
;
at
his
own
house
especially
,
and
of
a
Sunday
evening
,
when
he
has
nothing
to
do
.
"
Mr.
Darcy
smiled
;
but
Elizabeth
thought
she
could
perceive
that
he
was
rather
offended
,
and
therefore
checked
her
laugh
.
Miss
Bingley
warmly
resented
the
indignity
he
had
received
,
in
an
expostulation
with
her
brother
for
talking
such
nonsense
.
"
I
see
your
design
,
Bingley
,
"
said
his
friend
.
"
You
dislike
an
argument
,
and
want
to
silence
this
.
"
"
Perhaps
I
do
.
Arguments
are
too
much
like
disputes
.
If
you
and
Miss
Bennet
will
defer
yours
till
I
am
out
of
the
room
,
I
shall
be
very
thankful
;
and
then
you
may
say
whatever
you
like
of
me
.
"
"
What
you
ask
,
"
said
Elizabeth
,
"
is
no
sacrifice
on
my
side
;
and
Mr.
Darcy
had
much
better
finish
his
letter
.
"
Mr.
Darcy
took
her
advice
,
and
did
finish
his
letter
.
When
that
business
was
over
,
he
applied
to
Miss
Bingley
and
Elizabeth
for
an
indulgence
of
some
music
.
Miss
Bingley
moved
with
some
alacrity
to
the
pianoforte
;
and
,
after
a
polite
request
that
Elizabeth
would
lead
the
way
which
the
other
as
politely
and
more
earnestly
negatived
,
she
seated
herself
.
Mrs.
Hurst
sang
with
her
sister
,
and
while
they
were
thus
employed
,
Elizabeth
could
not
help
observing
,
as
she
turned
over
some
music-books
that
lay
on
the
instrument
,
how
frequently
Mr.
Darcy
's
eyes
were
fixed
on
her
.
She
hardly
knew
how
to
suppose
that
she
could
be
an
object
of
admiration
to
so
great
a
man
;
and
yet
that
he
should
look
at
her
because
he
disliked
her
,
was
still
more
strange
.
She
could
only
imagine
,
however
,
at
last
that
she
drew
his
notice
because
there
was
something
more
wrong
and
reprehensible
,
according
to
his
ideas
of
right
,
than
in
any
other
person
present
.
The
supposition
did
not
pain
her
.
She
liked
him
too
little
to
care
for
his
approbation
.