IMPRUDENT in Classic Quotes

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Quotes from Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
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 Current Search - imprudent in Pride and Prejudice
1  He believed him to be imprudent and extravagant.
Pride and Prejudice By Jane Austen
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 47
2  My father and mother knew nothing of that; they only felt how imprudent a match it must be.
Pride and Prejudice By Jane Austen
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 47
3  Do not involve yourself or endeavour to involve him in an affection which the want of fortune would make so very imprudent.
Pride and Prejudice By Jane Austen
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 26
4  She was then but fifteen, which must be her excuse; and after stating her imprudence, I am happy to add, that I owed the knowledge of it to herself.
Pride and Prejudice By Jane Austen
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 35
5  But Mr. Bennet was not of a disposition to seek comfort for the disappointment which his own imprudence had brought on, in any of those pleasures which too often console the unfortunate for their folly or their vice.
Pride and Prejudice By Jane Austen
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 42
6  She represented to him all the improprieties of Lydia's general behaviour, the little advantage she could derive from the friendship of such a woman as Mrs. Forster, and the probability of her being yet more imprudent with such a companion at Brighton, where the temptations must be greater than at home.
Pride and Prejudice By Jane Austen
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 41
7  Without supposing them, from what she saw, to be very seriously in love, their preference of each other was plain enough to make her a little uneasy; and she resolved to speak to Elizabeth on the subject before she left Hertfordshire, and represent to her the imprudence of encouraging such an attachment.
Pride and Prejudice By Jane Austen
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 25