"Jane Eyre"
by Charlotte Bronte

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     "Nothing to you? When a lady, young and full of life and health, charming with beauty and endowed with the gifts of rank and fortune, sits and smiles in the eyes of a gentleman you--"

     "I what?"

     "You know--and perhaps think well of."

 

     "I don't know the gentlemen here. I have scarcely interchanged a syllable with one of them; and as to thinking well of them, I consider some respectable, and stately, and middle-aged, and others young, dashing, handsome, and lively: but certainly they are all at liberty to be the recipients of whose smiles they please, without my feeling disposed to consider the transaction of any moment to me."

     "You don't know the gentlemen here? You have not exchanged a syllable with one of them? Will you say that of the master of the house!"

     "He is not at home."

 
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