第122章(1/3)
Mr.Wickham was so perfectly satisfied with this conversation that he never again distressed himself,or provoked his dear sister Elizabeth,by introducing the subject of it;and she was pleased to find that she had said enough to keep hi day of his and Lydia's departure soon came,an was forced to submit to a separation,which,as her husband by no means entered into her scheme of their all going to Newcastle,was likely to continue at least a twelvemonth.
“Oh!my dear Lydia,”she cried,“when shall we meet again?”
“Oh,lord!I don' these two or three years,perhaps.”
“Write to me very often,my dear.”
“As often as you know married women have never much time fo sisters may write to me.They will have nothing else to do.”
Mr.Wickham's adieus were much more affectionate than his wife's.He smiled,looked handsome,and said many pretty things.
“He is as fine a fellow,”said Mr.Bennet,as soon as they were out of the house,“as ever simpers, and smirks, and makes love to u prodigiously proud o even Sir William Lucas himself to produce a more valuable son-in-law.”
The loss of her daughter mad very dull for several days.
“I often think,”said she,“that there is nothing so bad as parting with one' seems so forlorn without them.”
“This is the consequence, you see, Madam, of marrying a daughter,”said Elizabeth.“It must make you better satisfied that your other four are single.”
“It is no suc does not leave me because she is married,but only because her husband's regiment happens to be so fa that had been nearer, she would not have gone so soon.”
But the spiritless condition which this event threw her into was shortly relieved, and her mind opened again to the agitation of hope,by an article of news which then began to be i housekeeper at Netherfield had received orders to prepare for the arrival of her master,who was coming down in a day or two,to shoot there for severa was quite in th loo
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