IMPOSSIBILITY in Classic Quotes

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Quotes from Mansfield Park by Jane Austen
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 Current Search - impossibility in Mansfield Park
1  It would be impossible to fill it up.
Mansfield Park By Jane Austen
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XIV
2  It would be absolutely impossible for me.
Mansfield Park By Jane Austen
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XV
3  It was impossible for many of the others not to smile.
Mansfield Park By Jane Austen
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XIX
4  It was impossible for her to be insensible of Mr. Crawford's change of manners.
Mansfield Park By Jane Austen
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XXVI
5  It is impossible that your own observation can have given you much knowledge of the clergy.
Mansfield Park By Jane Austen
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XI
6  I have such innumerable presents from him that it is quite impossible for me to value or for him to remember half.
Mansfield Park By Jane Austen
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XXVI
7  She could almost have thought that Edmund and Miss Crawford had left it, but that it was impossible for Edmund to forget her so entirely.
Mansfield Park By Jane Austen
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER X
8  The impossibility of not doing everything in the world to make Fanny Price happy, or of ceasing to love Fanny Price, was of course the groundwork of his eloquent answer.
Mansfield Park By Jane Austen
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XXX
9  With all your partiality for Cottager's wife," said Henry Crawford, "it will be impossible to make anything of it fit for your sister, and we must not suffer her good-nature to be imposed on.
Mansfield Park By Jane Austen
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XIV
10  Fanny was led off very willingly, though it was impossible for her to feel much gratitude towards her cousin, or distinguish, as he certainly did, between the selfishness of another person and his own.
Mansfield Park By Jane Austen
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XII
11  Lord Ravenshaw and the duke had appropriated the only two characters worth playing before I reached Ecclesford; and though Lord Ravenshaw offered to resign his to me, it was impossible to take it, you know.
Mansfield Park By Jane Austen
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XIII
12  It is not worth complaining about; but to be sure the poor old dowager could not have died at a worse time; and it is impossible to help wishing that the news could have been suppressed for just the three days we wanted.
Mansfield Park By Jane Austen
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XIII
13  She had by no means forgotten the past, and she thought as ill of him as ever; but she felt his powers: he was entertaining; and his manners were so improved, so polite, so seriously and blamelessly polite, that it was impossible not to be civil to him in return.
Mansfield Park By Jane Austen
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XXIV
14  It was so agreeable to her to see him again, and hear him talk, to have her ear amused and her whole comprehension filled by his narratives, that she began particularly to feel how dreadfully she must have missed him, and how impossible it would have been for her to bear a lengthened absence.
Mansfield Park By Jane Austen
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XIX
15  The politeness which she had been brought up to practise as a duty made it impossible for her to escape; while the want of that higher species of self-command, that just consideration of others, that knowledge of her own heart, that principle of right, which had not formed any essential part of her education, made her miserable under it.
Mansfield Park By Jane Austen
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER IX
16  The consultation upon the play still went on, and Miss Crawford's attention was first called from Fanny by Tom Bertram's telling her, with infinite regret, that he found it absolutely impossible for him to undertake the part of Anhalt in addition to the Butler: he had been most anxiously trying to make it out to be feasible, but it would not do; he must give it up.
Mansfield Park By Jane Austen
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XV
17  Under this infatuating principle, counteracted by no real affection for her sister, it was impossible for her to aim at more than the credit of projecting and arranging so expensive a charity; though perhaps she might so little know herself as to walk home to the Parsonage, after this conversation, in the happy belief of being the most liberal-minded sister and aunt in the world.
Mansfield Park By Jane Austen
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER I
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