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"And is that to be my only security? Alas, alas!"
"Nay, I am sure you cannot have a better; for if I do not know anybody, it is impossible for me to talk to them; and, besides, I do not want to talk to anybody"
"Now you have given e Do you find Bath as agreeable as when I had the honour ofthe inquiry before?"
"Yes, quite--et to be tired of it at the proper tiht to be tired at the end of six weeks"
"I do not think I should be tired, if I were to stay here six months"
"Bath, compared with London, has little variety, and so everybody finds out every year 'For six weeks, I allow Bath is pleasant enough; but beyond that, it is the most tiresome place in the world' You would be told so by people of all descriptions, who cothen their six weeks into ten or twelve, and go away at last because they can afford to stay no longer"
"Well, other people o to Londonof Bath But I, who live in a sreater sameness in such a place as this than in my own hos to be seen and done all day long, which I can know nothing of there"
"You are not fond of the country"
"Yes, I am I have always lived there, and always been very happy
But certainly there is much more sameness in a country life than in a Bath life One day in the country is exactly like another"
"But then you spend your time so much more rationally in the country"
"Do I?"
"Do you not?"
"I do not believe there is much difference"
"Here you are in pursuit only of a"
"And so I am at home--only I do not find so much of it I walk about here, and so I do there; but here I see a variety of people in every street, and there I can only go and call on Mrs Allen"
Mr Tilney was very o and call on Mrs Allen!" he repeated "What a picture of intellectual poverty! However, when you sink into this abyss again, you will have more to say You will be able to talk of Bath, and of all that you did here"