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141
Fanny
soon
learnt
how
unnecessary
had
been
her
fears
of
a
removal
;
and
her
spontaneous
,
untaught
felicity
on
the
discovery
,
conveyed
some
consolation
to
Edmund
for
his
disappointment
in
what
he
had
expected
to
be
so
essentially
serviceable
to
her
.
Mrs
.
Norris
took
possession
of
the
White
House
,
the
Grants
arrived
at
the
Parsonage
,
and
these
events
over
,
everything
at
Mansfield
went
on
for
some
time
as
usual
.
142
The
Grants
showing
a
disposition
to
be
friendly
and
sociable
,
gave
great
satisfaction
in
the
main
among
their
new
acquaintance
.
They
had
their
faults
,
and
Mrs
.
Norris
soon
found
them
out
.
143
The
Doctor
was
very
fond
of
eating
,
and
would
have
a
good
dinner
every
day
;
and
Mrs
.
Grant
,
instead
of
contriving
to
gratify
him
at
little
expense
,
gave
her
cook
as
high
wages
as
they
did
at
Mansfield
Park
,
and
was
scarcely
ever
seen
in
her
offices
.
Mrs
.
Norris
could
not
speak
with
any
temper
of
such
grievances
,
nor
of
the
quantity
of
butter
and
eggs
that
were
regularly
consumed
in
the
house
.
Nobody
loved
plenty
and
hospitality
more
than
herself
;
nobody
more
hated
pitiful
doings
;
the
Parsonage
,
she
believed
,
had
never
been
wanting
in
comforts
of
any
sort
,
had
never
borne
a
bad
character
in
her
time
,
but
this
was
a
way
of
going
on
that
she
could
not
understand
.
A
fine
lady
in
a
country
parsonage
was
quite
out
of
place
.
Her
store
-
room
,
she
thought
,
might
have
been
good
enough
for
Mrs
.
Grant
to
go
into
.
Inquire
where
she
would
,
she
could
not
find
out
that
Mrs
.
Grant
had
ever
had
more
than
five
thousand
pounds
.
Отключить рекламу
144
Lady
Bertram
listened
without
much
interest
to
this
sort
of
invective
.
She
could
not
enter
into
the
wrongs
of
an
economist
,
but
she
felt
all
the
injuries
of
beauty
in
Mrs
.
Grant
s
being
so
well
settled
in
life
without
being
handsome
,
and
expressed
her
astonishment
on
that
point
almost
as
often
,
though
not
so
diffusely
,
as
Mrs
.
Norris
discussed
the
other
.
145
These
opinions
had
been
hardly
canvassed
a
year
before
another
event
arose
of
such
importance
in
the
family
,
as
might
fairly
claim
some
place
in
the
thoughts
and
conversation
of
the
ladies
.
146
Sir
Thomas
found
it
expedient
to
go
to
Antigua
himself
,
for
the
better
arrangement
of
his
affairs
,
and
he
took
his
eldest
son
with
him
,
in
the
hope
of
detaching
him
from
some
bad
connexions
at
home
.
They
left
England
with
the
probability
of
being
nearly
a
twelvemonth
absent
.
147
The
necessity
of
the
measure
in
a
pecuniary
light
,
and
the
hope
of
its
utility
to
his
son
,
reconciled
Sir
Thomas
to
the
effort
of
quitting
the
rest
of
his
family
,
and
of
leaving
his
daughters
to
the
direction
of
others
at
their
present
most
interesting
time
of
life
.
He
could
not
think
Lady
Bertram
quite
equal
to
supply
his
place
with
them
,
or
rather
,
to
perform
what
should
have
been
her
own
;
but
,
in
Mrs
.
Norris
s
watchful
attention
,
and
in
Edmund
s
judgment
,
he
had
sufficient
confidence
to
make
him
go
without
fears
for
their
conduct
.
Отключить рекламу
148
Lady
Bertram
did
not
at
all
like
to
have
her
husband
leave
her
;
but
she
was
not
disturbed
by
any
alarm
for
his
safety
,
or
solicitude
for
his
comfort
,
being
one
of
those
persons
who
think
nothing
can
be
dangerous
,
or
difficult
,
or
fatiguing
to
anybody
but
themselves
.
149
The
Miss
Bertrams
were
much
to
be
pitied
on
the
occasion
:
not
for
their
sorrow
,
but
for
their
want
of
it
.
Their
father
was
no
object
of
love
to
them
;
he
had
never
seemed
the
friend
of
their
pleasures
,
and
his
absence
was
unhappily
most
welcome
.
They
were
relieved
by
it
from
all
restraint
;
and
without
aiming
at
one
gratification
that
would
probably
have
been
forbidden
by
Sir
Thomas
,
they
felt
themselves
immediately
at
their
own
disposal
,
and
to
have
every
indulgence
within
their
reach
150
Fanny
s
relief
,
and
her
consciousness
of
it
,
were
quite
equal
to
her
cousins
;
but
a
more
tender
nature
suggested
that
her
feelings
were
ungrateful
,
and
she
really
grieved
because
she
could
not
grieve
.
Sir
Thomas
,
who
had
done
so
much
for
her
and
her
brothers
,
and
who
was
gone
perhaps
never
to
return
!
that
she
should
see
him
go
without
a
tear
!
it
was
a
shameful
insensibility
.
He
had
said
to
her
,
moreover
,
on
the
very
last
morning
,
that
he
hoped
she
might
see
William
again
in
the
course
of
the
ensuing
winter
,
and
had
charged
her
to
write
and
invite
him
to
Mansfield
as
soon
as
the
squadron
to
which
he
belonged
should
be
known
to
be
in
England
.
This
was
so
thoughtful
and
kind
!
and
would
he
only
have
smiled
upon
her
,
and
called
her
my
dear
Fanny
,
while
he
said
it
,
every
former
frown
or
cold
address
might
have
been
forgotten
.
But
he
had
ended
his
speech
in
a
way
to
sink
her
in
sad
mortification
,
by
adding
,
If
William
does
come
to
Mansfield
,
I
hope
you
may
be
able
to
convince
him
that
the
many
years
which
have
passed
since
you
parted
have
not
been
spent
on
your
side
entirely
without
improvement
;
though
,
I
fear
,
he
must
find
his
sister
at
sixteen
in
some
respects
too
much
like
his
sister
at
ten
.
She
cried
bitterly
over
this
reflection
when
her
uncle
was
gone
;
and
her
cousins
,
on
seeing
her
with
red
eyes
,
set
her
down
as
a
hypocrite
.