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- Джейн Остен
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- Мэнсфилд Парк
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- Стр. 124/228
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William
was
often
called
on
by
his
uncle
to
be
the
talker
.
His
recitals
were
amusing
in
themselves
to
Sir
Thomas
,
but
the
chief
object
in
seeking
them
was
to
understand
the
reciter
,
to
know
the
young
man
by
his
histories
;
and
he
listened
to
his
clear
,
simple
,
spirited
details
with
full
satisfaction
,
seeing
in
them
the
proof
of
good
principles
,
professional
knowledge
,
energy
,
courage
,
and
cheerfulness
,
everything
that
could
deserve
or
promise
well
.
Young
as
he
was
,
William
had
already
seen
a
great
deal
.
He
had
been
in
the
Mediterranean
;
in
the
West
Indies
;
in
the
Mediterranean
again
;
had
been
often
taken
on
shore
by
the
favour
of
his
captain
,
and
in
the
course
of
seven
years
had
known
every
variety
of
danger
which
sea
and
war
together
could
offer
.
With
such
means
in
his
power
he
had
a
right
to
be
listened
to
;
and
though
Mrs
.
Norris
could
fidget
about
the
room
,
and
disturb
everybody
in
quest
of
two
needlefuls
of
thread
or
a
second
-
hand
shirt
button
,
in
the
midst
of
her
nephew
’
s
account
of
a
shipwreck
or
an
engagement
,
everybody
else
was
attentive
;
and
even
Lady
Bertram
could
not
hear
of
such
horrors
unmoved
,
or
without
sometimes
lifting
her
eyes
from
her
work
to
say
,
“
Dear
me
!
how
disagreeable
!
I
wonder
anybody
can
ever
go
to
sea
.
”
To
Henry
Crawford
they
gave
a
different
feeling
.
He
longed
to
have
been
at
sea
,
and
seen
and
done
and
suffered
as
much
.
His
heart
was
warmed
,
his
fancy
fired
,
and
he
felt
the
highest
respect
for
a
lad
who
,
before
he
was
twenty
,
had
gone
through
such
bodily
hardships
and
given
such
proofs
of
mind
.
The
glory
of
heroism
,
of
usefulness
,
of
exertion
,
of
endurance
,
made
his
own
habits
of
selfish
indulgence
appear
in
shameful
contrast
;
and
he
wished
he
had
been
a
William
Price
,
distinguishing
himself
and
working
his
way
to
fortune
and
consequence
with
so
much
self
-
respect
and
happy
ardour
,
instead
of
what
he
was
!
The
wish
was
rather
eager
than
lasting
.
He
was
roused
from
the
reverie
of
retrospection
and
regret
produced
by
it
,
by
some
inquiry
from
Edmund
as
to
his
plans
for
the
next
day
’
s
hunting
;
and
he
found
it
was
as
well
to
be
a
man
of
fortune
at
once
with
horses
and
grooms
at
his
command
.
In
one
respect
it
was
better
,
as
it
gave
him
the
means
of
conferring
a
kindness
where
he
wished
to
oblige
.
With
spirits
,
courage
,
and
curiosity
up
to
anything
,
William
expressed
an
inclination
to
hunt
;
and
Crawford
could
mount
him
without
the
slightest
inconvenience
to
himself
,
and
with
only
some
scruples
to
obviate
in
Sir
Thomas
,
who
knew
better
than
his
nephew
the
value
of
such
a
loan
,
and
some
alarms
to
reason
away
in
Fanny
.
She
feared
for
William
;
by
no
means
convinced
by
all
that
he
could
relate
of
his
own
horsemanship
in
various
countries
,
of
the
scrambling
parties
in
which
he
had
been
engaged
,
the
rough
horses
and
mules
he
had
ridden
,
or
his
many
narrow
escapes
from
dreadful
falls
,
that
he
was
at
all
equal
to
the
management
of
a
high
-
fed
hunter
in
an
English
fox
-
chase
;
nor
till
he
returned
safe
and
well
,
without
accident
or
discredit
,
could
she
be
reconciled
to
the
risk
,
or
feel
any
of
that
obligation
to
Mr
.
Crawford
for
lending
the
horse
which
he
had
fully
intended
it
should
produce
When
it
was
proved
,
however
,
to
have
done
William
no
harm
,
she
could
allow
it
to
be
a
kindness
,
and
even
reward
the
owner
with
a
smile
when
the
animal
was
one
minute
tendered
to
his
use
again
;
and
the
next
,
with
the
greatest
cordiality
,
and
in
a
manner
not
to
be
resisted
,
made
over
to
his
use
entirely
so
long
as
he
remained
in
Northamptonshire
.
The
intercourse
of
the
two
families
was
at
this
period
more
nearly
restored
to
what
it
had
been
in
the
autumn
,
than
any
member
of
the
old
intimacy
had
thought
ever
likely
to
be
again
.
The
return
of
Henry
Crawford
,
and
the
arrival
of
William
Price
,
had
much
to
do
with
it
,
but
much
was
still
owing
to
Sir
Thomas
’
s
more
than
toleration
of
the
neighbourly
attempts
at
the
Parsonage
.
His
mind
,
now
disengaged
from
the
cares
which
had
pressed
on
him
at
first
,
was
at
leisure
to
find
the
Grants
and
their
young
inmates
really
worth
visiting
;
and
though
infinitely
above
scheming
or
contriving
for
any
the
most
advantageous
matrimonial
establishment
that
could
be
among
the
apparent
possibilities
of
any
one
most
dear
to
him
,
and
disdaining
even
as
a
littleness
the
being
quick
-
sighted
on
such
points
,
he
could
not
avoid
perceiving
,
in
a
grand
and
careless
way
,
that
Mr
.
Crawford
was
somewhat
distinguishing
his
niece
—
nor
perhaps
refrain
(
though
unconsciously
)
from
giving
a
more
willing
assent
to
invitations
on
that
account
.
His
readiness
,
however
,
in
agreeing
to
dine
at
the
Parsonage
,
when
the
general
invitation
was
at
last
hazarded
,
after
many
debates
and
many
doubts
as
to
whether
it
were
worth
while
,
“
because
Sir
Thomas
seemed
so
ill
inclined
,
and
Lady
Bertram
was
so
indolent
!
”
proceeded
from
good
-
breeding
and
goodwill
alone
,
and
had
nothing
to
do
with
Mr
.
Crawford
,
but
as
being
one
in
an
agreeable
group
:
for
it
was
in
the
course
of
that
very
visit
that
he
first
began
to
think
that
any
one
in
the
habit
of
such
idle
observations
would
have
thought
that
Mr
.
Crawford
was
the
admirer
of
Fanny
Price
.
The
meeting
was
generally
felt
to
be
a
pleasant
one
,
being
composed
in
a
good
proportion
of
those
who
would
talk
and
those
who
would
listen
;
and
the
dinner
itself
was
elegant
and
plentiful
,
according
to
the
usual
style
of
the
Grants
,
and
too
much
according
to
the
usual
habits
of
all
to
raise
any
emotion
except
in
Mrs
.
Norris
,
who
could
never
behold
either
the
wide
table
or
the
number
of
dishes
on
it
with
patience
,
and
who
did
always
contrive
to
experience
some
evil
from
the
passing
of
the
servants
behind
her
chair
,
and
to
bring
away
some
fresh
conviction
of
its
being
impossible
among
so
many
dishes
but
that
some
must
be
cold
.
In
the
evening
it
was
found
,
according
to
the
predetermination
of
Mrs
.
Grant
and
her
sister
,
that
after
making
up
the
whist
-
table
there
would
remain
sufficient
for
a
round
game
,
and
everybody
being
as
perfectly
complying
and
without
a
choice
as
on
such
occasions
they
always
are
,
speculation
was
decided
on
almost
as
soon
as
whist
;
and
Lady
Bertram
soon
found
herself
in
the
critical
situation
of
being
applied
to
for
her
own
choice
between
the
games
,
and
being
required
either
to
draw
a
card
for
whist
or
not
.
She
hesitated
.
Luckily
Sir
Thomas
was
at
hand
.
“
What
shall
I
do
,
Sir
Thomas
?
Whist
and
speculation
;
which
will
amuse
me
most
?
”