[Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen]@TWC D-Link book
Sense and Sensibility

CHAPTER 15
7/13

You had rather look out for misery for Marianne, and guilt for poor Willoughby, than an apology for the latter.

You are resolved to think him blameable, because he took leave of us with less affection than his usual behaviour has shewn.

And is no allowance to be made for inadvertence, or for spirits depressed by recent disappointment?
Are no probabilities to be accepted, merely because they are not certainties?
Is nothing due to the man whom we have all such reason to love, and no reason in the world to think ill of?
To the possibility of motives unanswerable in themselves, though unavoidably secret for a while?
And, after all, what is it you suspect him of ?" "I can hardly tell myself.

But suspicion of something unpleasant is the inevitable consequence of such an alteration as we just witnessed in him.

There is great truth, however, in what you have now urged of the allowances which ought to be made for him, and it is my wish to be candid in my judgment of every body.


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