Henry TilneyIt was Thorpe who misled him at first. Thorpe, who hoped to marry you himself. He thought you were Mr. Allen's heiress and he exaggerated Mr. Allen's birth to my father. You were only guilty of not being as rich as you were supposed to be. For that he turned you out of the house.
Catherine MorlandI thought you were so angry with me, you told him what you knew. Which would have justified any discourtesy.
Henry TilneyNo! The discourtesy was all his. I-I have broken with my father, Catherine, I may never speak to him again.
Henry TilneyLet me instead tell you what I said to him. I told him that I felt myself bound to you, by honor, by affection, and by a love so strong that nothing he could do could deter me from...
The Voice of Jane AustenTo begin perfect happiness at the respective ages of 26 and 18 is to do pretty well. Catherine and Henry were married, and in due course the joys of wedding gave way to the blessing of a christening. The bells rang and everyone smiled. No one more than so than Eleanor, whose beloved's sudden ascension to title and fortune finally allowed them to marry. I leave it to be settled whether the tendency of this story be to recommend parental tyranny or to reward filial disobedience.
🧡
👏
🥺
🤔
🥱
Henry TilneyNow I must give you one smirk, then we can be rational again.
🧡
👏
🥺
🤔
🥱
Henry TilneyYour imagination may be overactive, but your instinct was true. Our mother did suffer grievously and at the hands of our father. Do you remember I spoke of a kind of vampirism?
Henry TilneyPerhaps it was stupid to express it so, but we did watch him drain the life out of her with his coldness and his cruelty. He married her for her money, you see. She thought it was for love. It was a long time until she knew his heart was cold. No vampires, no blood. But worse crimes, crimes of the heart.
Catherine MorlandIt was stupid and wicked of me to think such things as I did.
🧡
👏
🥺
🤔
🥱
Catherine MorlandWhen shall we go into society, Mrs Allen? I suppose it is too late this evening?
Mrs. AllenBless you, my child, we neither of us have a stitch to wear!
Catherine MorlandI did bring my best frock and my pink muslin is not too bad, I think.
Mrs. AllenNo, no, no, no! Would you have us laughed out of Bath?
Mr. AllenResign yourself, Catherine! Shops must be visited! Money must be spent! Do you think you could bear it?
Mrs. AllenThere! Did you ever see anything prettier, Mr Allen?
Mr. AllenOther than yourself, do you mean, my dear?
Mrs. AllenOh, fine, Mr Allen! But Catherine...
Mr. AllenAh, she looks just as she should! Now... might we make our way, do you think? I entertain high hopes of our arriving at the rooms by midnight.
Mrs. AllenHow he teases us, Catherine! Midnight, indeed!
🧡
👏
🥺
🤔
🥱
Isabella ThorpeMy dear one, in this false world, people often make promises they have little intention of keeping. Remember, we are your *true* friends.
🧡
👏
🥺
🤔
🥱
[Riding in the curricle, Henry and Catherine see the first view of Northanger Abbey]
Henry TilneyThat's just the least of it. Dungeons, and sliding panels; skeletons; strange, unearthly cries in the night that pierce your very soul!
Catherine Morland[sardonically]Any vampires? Don't say vampires. I could bear anything, but not vampires.
Henry Tilney[laughing]Miss Morland, I believe you are teasing me now.
[seriously]
Henry TilneyI have to say, there is a kind of vampirism. No, let's just say that all houses have their secrets, and Northanger is no exception.
🧡
👏
🥺
🤔
🥱
The Voice of Jane AustenNo-one who had ever seen Catherine Morland in her infancy would have supposed her born to be a great heroine. Her situation in life, the character of her father and moth, and her own disposition, were equally against her. The Morlands were, in general, very plain, and Catherine, for many years of her life, as plain as any. Neither was it very wonderful that Catherine, who had, by nature, nothing heroic about her, should prefer cricket and baseball to dolls and books. But by the age of 15, appearances were mending. Catherine Morland was in training for a heroine.