Chapter 61

Had Elizabeth's viewpoint been completely drawn from her own family, she proved unable

have sizes up intimate felicity or homegrown solace.

Her dad, enthralled by youth and magnificence, and that appearance of affableness

which youth and magnificence for the most part give, had hitched a lady whose frail

understanding and narrow-minded mind had from the get-go in their marriage shut down

all genuine warmth for her. Regard, regard, and certainty had disappeared for ever;

and every one of his perspectives on homegrown satisfaction were ousted. However, Mr. Bennet was

not of a demeanor to look for solace for the failure which his own

impulsiveness had welcomed on, in any of those delights which time after time console

the awful for their imprudence or their bad habit. He was attached to the nation and of

books; and from these preferences had emerged his essential delights. To his better half he

was very little in any case obligated, than as her obliviousness and imprudence had

added to h
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