Chapter 47

Jane had proactively composed a couple of lines to her sister to report their protected appearance

in London; and when she composed once more, Elizabeth trusted it would be an option for her

to express something of the Bingleys.

Her anxiety during the current second letter was also compensated as fretfulness by and large is. Jane had been seven days around without one or the other seeing or hearing from Caroline. She represented it, nonetheless, by assuming that her last letter to her

companion from Longbourn had by some mishap been lost.

"My auntie," she proceeded, "is going to-morrow into that piece of the town, and I will accept the open door of bringing in Grosvenor Road."

She composed again when the visit was paid, and she had seen Miss Bingley.

"I didn't think Caroline in spirits," were her words, "however she was extremely delighted to see me, and censured me for giving her no notification of my approaching to London.

I was right, thusly, my last letter had never contacted he
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