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"
No
,
ma
’
am
.
What
is
it
?
"
"
Something
so
strange
!
But
you
shall
hear
it
all
.
—
When
I
got
to
Mr
.
Palmer
’
s
,
I
found
Charlotte
quite
in
a
fuss
about
the
child
.
She
was
sure
it
was
very
ill
—
it
cried
,
and
fretted
,
and
was
all
over
pimples
.
So
I
looked
at
it
directly
,
and
,
’
Lord
!
my
dear
,
’
says
I
,
’
it
is
nothing
in
the
world
,
but
the
red
gum
—
’
and
nurse
said
just
the
same
.
But
Charlotte
,
she
would
not
be
satisfied
,
so
Mr
.
Donavan
was
sent
for
;
and
luckily
he
happened
to
just
come
in
from
Harley
Street
,
so
he
stepped
over
directly
,
and
as
soon
as
ever
he
saw
the
child
,
he
said
just
as
we
did
,
that
it
was
nothing
in
the
world
but
the
red
gum
,
and
then
Charlotte
was
easy
.
And
so
,
just
as
he
was
going
away
again
,
it
came
into
my
head
,
I
am
sure
I
do
not
know
how
I
happened
to
think
of
it
,
but
it
came
into
my
head
to
ask
him
if
there
was
any
news
.
So
upon
that
,
he
smirked
,
and
simpered
,
and
looked
grave
,
and
seemed
to
know
something
or
other
,
and
at
last
he
said
in
a
whisper
,
’
For
fear
any
unpleasant
report
should
reach
the
young
ladies
under
your
care
as
to
their
sister
’
s
indisposition
,
I
think
it
advisable
to
say
,
that
I
believe
there
is
no
great
reason
for
alarm
;
I
hope
Mrs
.
Dashwood
will
do
very
well
.
’
"
"
What
!
is
Fanny
ill
?
"
"
That
is
exactly
what
I
said
,
my
dear
.
’
Lord
!
’
says
I
,
’
is
Mrs
.
Dashwood
ill
?
’
So
then
it
all
came
out
;
and
the
long
and
the
short
of
the
matter
,
by
all
I
can
learn
,
seems
to
be
this
.
Mr
.
Edward
Ferrars
,
the
very
young
man
I
used
to
joke
with
you
about
(
but
however
,
as
it
turns
out
,
I
am
monstrous
glad
there
was
never
any
thing
in
it
)
,
Mr
.
Edward
Ferrars
,
it
seems
,
has
been
engaged
above
this
twelvemonth
to
my
cousin
Lucy
!
—
There
’
s
for
you
,
my
dear
!
—
And
not
a
creature
knowing
a
syllable
of
the
matter
,
except
Nancy
!
—
Could
you
have
believed
such
a
thing
possible
?
—
There
is
no
great
wonder
in
their
liking
one
another
;
but
that
matters
should
be
brought
so
forward
between
them
,
and
nobody
suspect
it
!
—
THAT
is
strange
!
—
I
never
happened
to
see
them
together
,
or
I
am
sure
I
should
have
found
it
out
directly
.
Well
,
and
so
this
was
kept
a
great
secret
,
for
fear
of
Mrs
.
Ferrars
,
and
neither
she
nor
your
brother
or
sister
suspected
a
word
of
the
matter
;
—
till
this
very
morning
,
poor
Nancy
,
who
,
you
know
,
is
a
well
-
meaning
creature
,
but
no
conjurer
,
popt
it
all
out
.
’
Lord
!
’
thinks
she
to
herself
,
’
they
are
all
so
fond
of
Lucy
,
to
be
sure
they
will
make
no
difficulty
about
it
;
’
and
so
,
away
she
went
to
your
sister
,
who
was
sitting
all
alone
at
her
carpet
-
work
,
little
suspecting
what
was
to
come
—
for
she
had
just
been
saying
to
your
brother
,
only
five
minutes
before
,
that
she
thought
to
make
a
match
between
Edward
and
some
Lord
’
s
daughter
or
other
,
I
forget
who
.
So
you
may
think
what
a
blow
it
was
to
all
her
vanity
and
pride
.
She
fell
into
violent
hysterics
immediately
,
with
such
screams
as
reached
your
brother
’
s
ears
,
as
he
was
sitting
in
his
own
dressing
-
room
down
stairs
,
thinking
about
writing
a
letter
to
his
steward
in
the
country
.
So
up
he
flew
directly
,
and
a
terrible
scene
took
place
,
for
Lucy
was
come
to
them
by
that
time
,
little
dreaming
what
was
going
on
.
Poor
soul
!
I
pity
HER
.
And
I
must
say
,
I
think
she
was
used
very
hardly
;
for
your
sister
scolded
like
any
fury
,
and
soon
drove
her
into
a
fainting
fit
.
Nancy
,
she
fell
upon
her
knees
,
and
cried
bitterly
;
and
your
brother
,
he
walked
about
the
room
,
and
said
he
did
not
know
what
to
do
.
Mrs
.
Dashwood
declared
they
should
not
stay
a
minute
longer
in
the
house
,
and
your
brother
was
forced
to
go
down
upon
HIS
knees
too
,
to
persuade
her
to
let
them
stay
till
they
had
packed
up
their
clothes
.
THEN
she
fell
into
hysterics
again
,
and
he
was
so
frightened
that
he
would
send
for
Mr
.
Donavan
,
and
Mr
.
Donavan
found
the
house
in
all
this
uproar
.
The
carriage
was
at
the
door
ready
to
take
my
poor
cousins
away
,
and
they
were
just
stepping
in
as
he
came
off
;
poor
Lucy
in
such
a
condition
,
he
says
,
she
could
hardly
walk
;
and
Nancy
,
she
was
almost
as
bad
.
I
declare
,
I
have
no
patience
with
your
sister
;
and
I
hope
,
with
all
my
heart
,
it
will
be
a
match
in
spite
of
her
.
Lord
!
what
a
taking
poor
Mr
.
Edward
will
be
in
when
he
hears
of
it
!
To
have
his
love
used
so
scornfully
!
for
they
say
he
is
monstrous
fond
of
her
,
as
well
he
may
.
I
should
not
wonder
,
if
he
was
to
be
in
the
greatest
passion
!
—
and
Mr
.
Donavan
thinks
just
the
same
.
He
and
I
had
a
great
deal
of
talk
about
it
;
and
the
best
of
all
is
,
that
he
is
gone
back
again
to
Harley
Street
,
that
he
may
be
within
call
when
Mrs
.
Ferrars
is
told
of
it
,
for
she
was
sent
for
as
soon
as
ever
my
cousins
left
the
house
,
for
your
sister
was
sure
SHE
would
be
in
hysterics
too
;
and
so
she
may
,
for
what
I
care
.
I
have
no
pity
for
either
of
them
.
I
have
no
notion
of
people
’
s
making
such
a
to
-
do
about
money
and
greatness
.
There
is
no
reason
on
earth
why
Mr
.
Edward
and
Lucy
should
not
marry
;
for
I
am
sure
Mrs
.
Ferrars
may
afford
to
do
very
well
by
her
son
,
and
though
Lucy
has
next
to
nothing
herself
,
she
knows
better
than
any
body
how
to
make
the
most
of
every
thing
;
I
dare
say
,
if
Mrs
.
Ferrars
would
only
allow
him
five
hundred
a
-
year
,
she
would
make
as
good
an
appearance
with
it
as
any
body
else
would
with
eight
.
Lord
!
how
snug
they
might
live
in
such
another
cottage
as
yours
—
or
a
little
bigger
—
with
two
maids
,
and
two
men
;
and
I
believe
I
could
help
them
to
a
housemaid
,
for
my
Betty
has
a
sister
out
of
place
,
that
would
fit
them
exactly
.
"
Here
Mrs
.
Jennings
ceased
,
and
as
Elinor
had
had
time
enough
to
collect
her
thoughts
,
she
was
able
to
give
such
an
answer
,
and
make
such
observations
,
as
the
subject
might
naturally
be
supposed
to
produce
.
Happy
to
find
that
she
was
not
suspected
of
any
extraordinary
interest
in
it
;
that
Mrs
.
Jennings
(
as
she
had
of
late
often
hoped
might
be
the
case
)
had
ceased
to
imagine
her
at
all
attached
to
Edward
;
and
happy
above
all
the
rest
,
in
the
absence
of
Marianne
,
she
felt
very
well
able
to
speak
of
the
affair
without
embarrassment
,
and
to
give
her
judgment
,
as
she
believed
,
with
impartiality
on
the
conduct
of
every
one
concerned
in
it
.
She
could
hardly
determine
what
her
own
expectation
of
its
event
really
was
;
though
she
earnestly
tried
to
drive
away
the
notion
of
its
being
possible
to
end
otherwise
at
last
,
than
in
the
marriage
of
Edward
and
Lucy
.
What
Mrs
.
Ferrars
would
say
and
do
,
though
there
could
not
be
a
doubt
of
its
nature
,
she
was
anxious
to
hear
;
and
still
more
anxious
to
know
how
Edward
would
conduct
himself
.
For
HIM
she
felt
much
compassion
;
—
for
Lucy
very
little
—
and
it
cost
her
some
pains
to
procure
that
little
;
—
for
the
rest
of
the
party
none
at
all
.