Sometimes the Dashwood girls do not seem like sisters. Elinor is all calmness and reason, and can be relied upon for practical, common sense opinions. Marianne, on the other hand, is all sensibility, full of passionate and romantic feeling. She has no time for dull common sense--or for middle-aged men of thirty-five, long past the age of marriage.
True love can only be felt by the young, of course. And if your heart is broken at the age of seventeen, how can you ever expect to recover from the passionate misery that fills your life, waking and sleeping?
1 The Dashwood family
2 A new home
3 A handsome stranger
4 Departures and arrivals
5 Lucy Steele's secret
6 Elinor and Marianne in London
7 The truth about Willoughby
8 Edward's engaement
9 Marianne's illness
10 Return to Barton
etc.