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"Such a sister-in-law, Henry, I should delight in," said Eleanor with a sh she has behaved so ill by our faot the man she likes, she may be constant"
"Indeed I am afraid she will," replied Henry; "I am afraid she will be very constant, unless a baronet should coet the Bath paper, and look over the arrivals"
"You think it is all for as that seeet that, when she first knehat my father would do for them, she seemed quite disappointed that it was not more I never was so deceived in anyone's character in reat variety that you have known and studied"
"My own disappointreat; but, as for poor James, I suppose he will hardly ever recover it"
"Your brother is certainly very much to be pitied at present; but we s, undervalue yours You feel, I suppose, that in losing Isabella, you lose half yourself: you feel a void in your heart which nothing else can occupy
Society is beco irksome; and as for the amusements in which you ont to share at Bath, the very idea of theo to a ball for the world You feel that you have no longer any friend to whoard you can place dependence, or whose counsel, in any difficulty, you could rely on You feel all this?"
"No," said Catherine, after a few ht I? To say the truth, though I arieved, that I cannot still love her, that I aain, I do not feel so very, very ht"
"You feel, as you always do, what is ht to be investigated, that they may know themselves"
Catherine, by some chance or other, found her spirits so very ret her being led on, though so unaccountably, to mention the circumstance which had produced it