WILL GIVE BRAINLEST!! Read the passage.

—And from the time of our being in London together, I thought you really very much in love.—But you certainly are not at all—there is no concealing it.—What strange creatures we are!—It seems as if your being secure of him (as you say yourself) had made you Indifferent.
In this passage from “On Making an Agreeable Marriage,” what does Jane Austen say about the change in Fanny’s feelings?


Fanny was unsure if she was in love, but now that she knows the man loves her, she feels certain she loves him.

Fanny tried to convince Austen she was in love, but now Austen knows that Fanny was lying.

Fanny tried to hide being in love from Austen, but now she no longer tries to hide it.

Fanny seemed to be in love, but now that she knows the man loves her, she is less interested in him.