CodalSearch this book — or all of Codal…⌘K
nydus/Sense and SensibilityPublic

Two sisters take long journeys to love in early nineteenth-century England.

Page 243 of 403
Table of Contents

XXXIII

Jennings too, an exceedingly well-behaved woman, though not so elegant as her daughter. Your sister need not have any scruple even of visiting her , which, to say the truth, has been a little the case, and very naturally; for we only knew that Mrs. Jennings was the widow of a man who had got all his money in a low way; and Fanny and Mrs. Ferrars were both strongly prepossessed, that neither she nor her daughters were such kind of women as Fanny would like to associate with. But now I can carry her a most satisfactory account of both.”

243