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Julia
could
rejoice
that
he
was
gone
.
His
presence
was
beginning
to
be
odious
to
her
;
and
if
Maria
gained
him
not
,
she
was
now
cool
enough
to
dispense
with
any
other
revenge
.
She
did
not
want
exposure
to
be
added
to
desertion
.
Henry
Crawford
gone
,
she
could
even
pity
her
sister
.
With
a
purer
spirit
did
Fanny
rejoice
in
the
intelligence
.
She
heard
it
at
dinner
,
and
felt
it
a
blessing
.
By
all
the
others
it
was
mentioned
with
regret
;
and
his
merits
honoured
with
due
gradation
of
feeling
from
the
sincerity
of
Edmund
s
too
partial
regard
,
to
the
unconcern
of
his
mother
speaking
entirely
by
rote
.
Mrs
.
Norris
began
to
look
about
her
,
and
wonder
that
his
falling
in
love
with
Julia
had
come
to
nothing
;
and
could
almost
fear
that
she
had
been
remiss
herself
in
forwarding
it
;
but
with
so
many
to
care
for
,
how
was
it
possible
for
even
her
activity
to
keep
pace
with
her
wishes
?
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Another
day
or
two
,
and
Mr
.
Yates
was
gone
likewise
.
In
his
departure
Sir
Thomas
felt
the
chief
interest
:
wanting
to
be
alone
with
his
family
,
the
presence
of
a
stranger
superior
to
Mr
.
Yates
must
have
been
irksome
;
but
of
him
,
trifling
and
confident
,
idle
and
expensive
,
it
was
every
way
vexatious
.
In
himself
he
was
wearisome
,
but
as
the
friend
of
Tom
and
the
admirer
of
Julia
he
became
offensive
.
Sir
Thomas
had
been
quite
indifferent
to
Mr
.
Crawford
s
going
or
staying
:
but
his
good
wishes
for
Mr
.
Yates
s
having
a
pleasant
journey
,
as
he
walked
with
him
to
the
hall
-
door
,
were
given
with
genuine
satisfaction
.
Mr
Yates
had
staid
to
see
the
destruction
of
every
theatrical
preparation
at
Mansfield
,
the
removal
of
everything
appertaining
to
the
play
:
he
left
the
house
in
all
the
soberness
of
its
general
character
;
and
Sir
Thomas
hoped
,
in
seeing
him
out
of
it
,
to
be
rid
of
the
worst
object
connected
with
the
scheme
,
and
the
last
that
must
be
inevitably
reminding
him
of
its
existence
.
Mrs
.
Norris
contrived
to
remove
one
article
from
his
sight
that
might
have
distressed
him
.
The
curtain
,
over
which
she
had
presided
with
such
talent
and
such
success
,
went
off
with
her
to
her
cottage
,
where
she
happened
to
be
particularly
in
want
of
green
baize
.
Sir
Thomas
s
return
made
a
striking
change
in
the
ways
of
the
family
,
independent
of
Lovers
Vows
.
Under
his
government
,
Mansfield
was
an
altered
place
.
Some
members
of
their
society
sent
away
,
and
the
spirits
of
many
others
saddened
it
was
all
sameness
and
gloom
compared
with
the
past
a
sombre
family
party
rarely
enlivened
.
There
was
little
intercourse
with
the
Parsonage
.
Sir
Thomas
,
drawing
back
from
intimacies
in
general
,
was
particularly
disinclined
,
at
this
time
,
for
any
engagements
but
in
one
quarter
.
The
Rushworths
were
the
only
addition
to
his
own
domestic
circle
which
he
could
solicit
.
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Edmund
did
not
wonder
that
such
should
be
his
father
s
feelings
,
nor
could
he
regret
anything
but
the
exclusion
of
the
Grants
.
But
they
,
he
observed
to
Fanny
,
have
a
claim
.
They
seem
to
belong
to
us
;
they
seem
to
be
part
of
ourselves
.
I
could
wish
my
father
were
more
sensible
of
their
very
great
attention
to
my
mother
and
sisters
while
he
was
away
.
I
am
afraid
they
may
feel
themselves
neglected
.
But
the
truth
is
,
that
my
father
hardly
knows
them
.
They
had
not
been
here
a
twelvemonth
when
he
left
England
.
If
he
knew
them
better
,
he
would
value
their
society
as
it
deserves
;
for
they
are
in
fact
exactly
the
sort
of
people
he
would
like
.
We
are
sometimes
a
little
in
want
of
animation
among
ourselves
:
my
sisters
seem
out
of
spirits
,
and
Tom
is
certainly
not
at
his
ease
.
Dr
.
and
Mrs
.
Grant
would
enliven
us
,
and
make
our
evenings
pass
away
with
more
enjoyment
even
to
my
father
.
Do
you
think
so
?
said
Fanny
:
in
my
opinion
,
my
uncle
would
not
like
any
addition
.
I
think
he
values
the
very
quietness
you
speak
of
,
and
that
the
repose
of
his
own
family
circle
is
all
he
wants
.
And
it
does
not
appear
to
me
that
we
are
more
serious
than
we
used
to
be
I
mean
before
my
uncle
went
abroad
.
As
well
as
I
can
recollect
,
it
was
always
much
the
same
.
There
was
never
much
laughing
in
his
presence
;
or
,
if
there
is
any
difference
,
it
is
not
more
,
I
think
,
than
such
an
absence
has
a
tendency
to
produce
at
first
.
There
must
be
a
sort
of
shyness
;
but
I
cannot
recollect
that
our
evenings
formerly
were
ever
merry
,
except
when
my
uncle
was
in
town
.
No
young
people
s
are
,
I
suppose
,
when
those
they
look
up
to
are
at
home
.