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"
I
like
her
appearance
,
"
said
Elizabeth
,
struck
with
other
ideas
.
"
She
looks
sickly
and
cross
.
Yes
,
she
will
do
for
him
very
well
.
She
will
make
him
a
very
proper
wife
.
"
Mr.
Collins
and
Charlotte
were
both
standing
at
the
gate
in
conversation
with
the
ladies
;
and
Sir
William
,
to
Elizabeth
's
high
diversion
,
was
stationed
in
the
doorway
,
in
earnest
contemplation
of
the
greatness
before
him
,
and
constantly
bowing
whenever
Miss
de
Bourgh
looked
that
way
.
At
length
there
was
nothing
more
to
be
said
;
the
ladies
drove
on
,
and
the
others
returned
into
the
house
.
Mr.
Collins
no
sooner
saw
the
two
girls
than
he
began
to
congratulate
them
on
their
good
fortune
,
which
Charlotte
explained
by
letting
them
know
that
the
whole
party
was
asked
to
dine
at
Rosings
the
next
day
.
Mr.
Collins
's
triumph
,
in
consequence
of
this
invitation
,
was
complete
.
The
power
of
displaying
the
grandeur
of
his
patroness
to
his
wondering
visitors
,
and
of
letting
them
see
her
civility
towards
himself
and
his
wife
,
was
exactly
what
he
had
wished
for
;
and
that
an
opportunity
of
doing
it
should
be
given
so
soon
,
was
such
an
instance
of
Lady
Catherine
's
condescension
,
as
he
knew
not
how
to
admire
enough
.
"
I
confess
,
"
said
he
,
"
that
I
should
not
have
been
at
all
surprised
by
her
ladyship
's
asking
us
on
Sunday
to
drink
tea
and
spend
the
evening
at
Rosings
.
I
rather
expected
,
from
my
knowledge
of
her
affability
,
that
it
would
happen
.
But
who
could
have
foreseen
such
an
attention
as
this
?
Who
could
have
imagined
that
we
should
receive
an
invitation
to
dine
there
(
an
invitation
,
moreover
,
including
the
whole
party
)
so
immediately
after
your
arrival
!
"
"
I
am
the
less
surprised
at
what
has
happened
,
"
replied
Sir
William
,
"
from
that
knowledge
of
what
the
manners
of
the
great
really
are
,
which
my
situation
in
life
has
allowed
me
to
acquire
.
About
the
court
,
such
instances
of
elegant
breeding
are
not
uncommon
.
"
Scarcely
anything
was
talked
of
the
whole
day
or
next
morning
but
their
visit
to
Rosings
.
Mr.
Collins
was
carefully
instructing
them
in
what
they
were
to
expect
,
that
the
sight
of
such
rooms
,
so
many
servants
,
and
so
splendid
a
dinner
,
might
not
wholly
overpower
them
.
When
the
ladies
were
separating
for
the
toilette
,
he
said
to
Elizabeth
--
"
Do
not
make
yourself
uneasy
,
my
dear
cousin
,
about
your
apparel
.
Lady
Catherine
is
far
from
requiring
that
elegance
of
dress
in
us
which
becomes
herself
and
her
daughter
.
I
would
advise
you
merely
to
put
on
whatever
of
your
clothes
is
superior
to
the
rest
--
there
is
no
occasion
for
anything
more
.
Lady
Catherine
will
not
think
the
worse
of
you
for
being
simply
dressed
.
She
likes
to
have
the
distinction
of
rank
preserved
.
"