and seek a
reconciliation;
and, after
a little
further
resistance
on the
part of
his aunt,
her
resentment
gave way,
either to
her
affection
for him,
or her
curiosity
to see how
his wife
conducted
herself;
and she
condescended
to wait on
them at
Pemberley,
in spite
of that
pollution
which its
woods had
received,
not merely
from the
presence
of such a
mistress,
but the
visits of
her uncle
and aunt
from the
city. With
the
Gardiners,
they were
always on
the most
intimate