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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen


156

only the morning before; and at last she was referred for the truth
of every particular to Colonel Fitzwilliam himself-from whom she
had previously received the information of his near concern in all
his cousin’s affairs, and whose character she had no reason to
question. At one time she had almost resolved on applying to him,
but the idea was checked by the awkwardness of the application,
and at length wholly banished by the conviction that Mr. Darcy
would never have hazarded such a proposal, if he had not been
well assured of his cousin’s corroboration.

She perfectly remembered everything that had passed in
conversation between Wickham and herself, in their first evening
at Mr. Philips’s. Many of his expressions were still fresh in her
memory. She was now struck with the impropriety of such
communications to a stranger, and wondered it had escaped her
before. She saw the indelicacy of putting himself forward as he had
done, and the inconsistency of his professions with his conduct.
She remembered that he had boasted of having no fear of seeing
Mr. Darcy-that Mr. Darcy might leave the country, but that he
should stand his ground: yet he had avoided the Netherfield ball
the very next week. She remembered also that, till the Netherfield
family had quitted the country, he had told his story to no one but
herself; but that after their removal it had been everywhere
discussed; that he had then no reserves, no scruples in sinking Mr.
Darcy’s character, though he had assured her that respect for the
father would always prevent his exposing the son.

How differently did everything now appear in which he was
concerned! His attentions to Miss King were now the consequence
of views solely and hatefully mercenary; and the mediocrity of her
fortune proved no longer the moderation of his wishes, but his
eagerness to grasp at anything. His behavior to herself could now
have had no tolerable motive; he had either been deceived with
regard to her fortune, or had been gratifying his vanity by
encouraging the preference which she believed she had most
incautiously shown. Every lingering struggle in his favor grew
fainter and fainter; and in farther justification of Mr. Darcy, she
could not but allow that Mr. Bingley, when questioned by Jane,
had long ago asserted his blamelessness in the affair; that proud
and repulsive as were his manners, she had never, in the whole
course of their acquaintance-an acquaintance which had latterly
brought them much together, and given her a sort of intimacy with
his ways-seen anything that betrayed him to be unprincipled or
unjust-anything that spoke him of irreligious or immoral habits;
that among his own connections he was esteemed and valued-that
even Wickham had allowed him merit as a brother, and that she
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