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Not
only
at
home
did
her
value
increase
,
but
at
the
Parsonage
too
.
In
that
house
,
which
she
had
hardly
entered
twice
a
year
since
Mr
.
Norris
s
death
,
she
became
a
welcome
,
an
invited
guest
,
and
in
the
gloom
and
dirt
of
a
November
day
,
most
acceptable
to
Mary
Crawford
.
Her
visits
there
,
beginning
by
chance
,
were
continued
by
solicitation
.
Mrs
.
Grant
,
really
eager
to
get
any
change
for
her
sister
,
could
,
by
the
easiest
self
-
deceit
,
persuade
herself
that
she
was
doing
the
kindest
thing
by
Fanny
,
and
giving
her
the
most
important
opportunities
of
improvement
in
pressing
her
frequent
calls
.
Fanny
,
having
been
sent
into
the
village
on
some
errand
by
her
aunt
Norris
,
was
overtaken
by
a
heavy
shower
close
to
the
Parsonage
;
and
being
descried
from
one
of
the
windows
endeavouring
to
find
shelter
under
the
branches
and
lingering
leaves
of
an
oak
just
beyond
their
premises
,
was
forced
,
though
not
without
some
modest
reluctance
on
her
part
,
to
come
in
.
A
civil
servant
she
had
withstood
;
but
when
Dr
.
Grant
himself
went
out
with
an
umbrella
,
there
was
nothing
to
be
done
but
to
be
very
much
ashamed
,
and
to
get
into
the
house
as
fast
as
possible
;
and
to
poor
Miss
Crawford
,
who
had
just
been
contemplating
the
dismal
rain
in
a
very
desponding
state
of
mind
,
sighing
over
the
ruin
of
all
her
plan
of
exercise
for
that
morning
,
and
of
every
chance
of
seeing
a
single
creature
beyond
themselves
for
the
next
twenty
-
four
hours
,
the
sound
of
a
little
bustle
at
the
front
door
,
and
the
sight
of
Miss
Price
dripping
with
wet
in
the
vestibule
,
was
delightful
.
The
value
of
an
event
on
a
wet
day
in
the
country
was
most
forcibly
brought
before
her
.
She
was
all
alive
again
directly
,
and
among
the
most
active
in
being
useful
to
Fanny
,
in
detecting
her
to
be
wetter
than
she
would
at
first
allow
,
and
providing
her
with
dry
clothes
;
and
Fanny
,
after
being
obliged
to
submit
to
all
this
attention
,
and
to
being
assisted
and
waited
on
by
mistresses
and
maids
,
being
also
obliged
,
on
returning
downstairs
,
to
be
fixed
in
their
drawing
-
room
for
an
hour
while
the
rain
continued
,
the
blessing
of
something
fresh
to
see
and
think
of
was
thus
extended
to
Miss
Crawford
,
and
might
carry
on
her
spirits
to
the
period
of
dressing
and
dinner
.
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The
two
sisters
were
so
kind
to
her
,
and
so
pleasant
,
that
Fanny
might
have
enjoyed
her
visit
could
she
have
believed
herself
not
in
the
way
,
and
could
she
have
foreseen
that
the
weather
would
certainly
clear
at
the
end
of
the
hour
,
and
save
her
from
the
shame
of
having
Dr
.
Grant
s
carriage
and
horses
out
to
take
her
home
,
with
which
she
was
threatened
.
As
to
anxiety
for
any
alarm
that
her
absence
in
such
weather
might
occasion
at
home
,
she
had
nothing
to
suffer
on
that
score
;
for
as
her
being
out
was
known
only
to
her
two
aunts
,
she
was
perfectly
aware
that
none
would
be
felt
,
and
that
in
whatever
cottage
aunt
Norris
might
chuse
to
establish
her
during
the
rain
,
her
being
in
such
cottage
would
be
indubitable
to
aunt
Bertram
.
It
was
beginning
to
look
brighter
,
when
Fanny
,
observing
a
harp
in
the
room
,
asked
some
questions
about
it
,
which
soon
led
to
an
acknowledgment
of
her
wishing
very
much
to
hear
it
,
and
a
confession
,
which
could
hardly
be
believed
,
of
her
having
never
yet
heard
it
since
its
being
in
Mansfield
.
To
Fanny
herself
it
appeared
a
very
simple
and
natural
circumstance
.
She
had
scarcely
ever
been
at
the
Parsonage
since
the
instrument
s
arrival
,
there
had
been
no
reason
that
she
should
;
but
Miss
Crawford
,
calling
to
mind
an
early
expressed
wish
on
the
subject
,
was
concerned
at
her
own
neglect
;
and
Shall
I
play
to
you
now
?
and
What
will
you
have
?
were
questions
immediately
following
with
the
readiest
good
-
humour
.
She
played
accordingly
;
happy
to
have
a
new
listener
,
and
a
listener
who
seemed
so
much
obliged
,
so
full
of
wonder
at
the
performance
,
and
who
shewed
herself
not
wanting
in
taste
.
She
played
till
Fanny
s
eyes
,
straying
to
the
window
on
the
weather
s
being
evidently
fair
,
spoke
what
she
felt
must
be
done
.
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Another
quarter
of
an
hour
,
said
Miss
Crawford
,
and
we
shall
see
how
it
will
be
.
Do
not
run
away
the
first
moment
of
its
holding
up
.
Those
clouds
look
alarming
.
But
they
are
passed
over
,
said
Fanny
.
I
have
been
watching
them
.
This
weather
is
all
from
the
south
.