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Austen, Jane

"Sense And Sensibility"

My feelings are at present in a state of dreadful indecision; I wish to acquit you, but certainty on either side will be ease to what I now suffer. If your sentiments are no longer what they were, you will return my notes, and the lock of my hair which is in your possession.


"M.D."





? ? ? ? That such letters, so full of affection and confidence, could have been so answered, Elinor, for Willoughby's sake, would have been unwilling to believe. But her condemnation of him did not blind her to the impropriety of their having been written at all; and she was silently grieving over the imprudence which had hazarded such unsolicited proofs of tenderness, not warranted by anything preceding, and most severely condemned by the event, when Marianne, perceiving that she had finished the letters, observed to her that they contained nothing but what any one would have written in the same situation.


? ? ? ? "I felt myself," she added, "to be as solemnly engaged to him, as if the strictest legal covenant had bound us to each other."


? ? ? ? "I can believe it," said Elinor; "but unfortunately he did not feel the same.


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