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Mrs. Bennet: "My dear, Mr. Bennet! Wonderful news! Netherfield park is let at last."
Mr. Bennet: "Is it?"
Mrs. Bennet: "Yes, it is for I have just had it from Mrs. Long. And do you not want to
know who has taken it?"
Mr. Bennet: "You want to tell me and I have no objection to hearing it."
Mrs. Bennet: "What a fine thing for our girls."
Mr. Bennet: "How so? How can it affect them?"
Mrs. Bennet: "Oh, Mr. Bennet, how can you be so tiresome? You must know that I'm
thinking of his marrying one of them?"
Mrs. Bennet: "You must visit him directly he comes."
Mr. Bennet: "Visit him? Oh, no, no, I see no occasion for that."
Mrs. Bennet: "Oh, Mr. Bennet!"
Mr. Bennet: "Go yourself with the girls, or, still better, send them by themselves."
Mrs. Bennet: "By themselves?"
Mr. Bennet: "Aye, for your as handsome as any of them, Mr. Bingley might like you best
of the party."
Mrs. Bennet: "You have no compassion on my poor nerves."
Mr. Bennet: "You mistake me, my dear. I have a high respect for your nerves, they have
been my old friends these twenty years at least."
Mr. Bennet: "Well, I hope you will get over it and live to see many young men of five
thousand a year come into the neighbourhood."
Mrs. Bennet: "It will be no use to us if twenty such should come since you will not
visit them."
Mr. Bennet: "Depend upon it, my dear. When there are twenty, I'll visit them all."
Mrs. Bennet: "I am sick of Mr. Bingley!"
Mr. Bennet: "I'm sorry to hear that. If I had known as much this morning, I should never
have called on him."
Mrs. Bennet: "Oh, my dear Mr. Bennet. How good you are to us."
Mr. Bennet: "Yes, well, well."
Mrs. Bennet: "He slighted poor Lizzy, you know. And flatly refused to stand up with
her."
Mr. Bennet: "Slighted my Lizzy, did he?"
Elizabeth: "I didn't care from him either, Father, so it is of little matter."
Mrs. Bennet: "Three daughters married. Oh, Mr. Bennet, God has been very good to us."
Mr. Bennet: "Yes, so it would seem."