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- Джейн Остен
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- Мэнсфилд Парк
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- Стр. 153/228
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“
You
must
give
us
more
than
half
your
time
,
”
said
he
.
“
I
cannot
admit
Mrs
.
Grant
to
have
an
equal
claim
with
Fanny
and
myself
,
for
we
shall
both
have
a
right
in
you
.
Fanny
will
be
so
truly
your
sister
!
”
Mary
had
only
to
be
grateful
and
give
general
assurances
;
but
she
was
now
very
fully
purposed
to
be
the
guest
of
neither
brother
nor
sister
many
months
longer
.
“
You
will
divide
your
year
between
London
and
Northamptonshire
?
”
“
Yes
.
”
“
That
’
s
right
;
and
in
London
,
of
course
,
a
house
of
your
own
:
no
longer
with
the
Admiral
.
My
dearest
Henry
,
the
advantage
to
you
of
getting
away
from
the
Admiral
before
your
manners
are
hurt
by
the
contagion
of
his
,
before
you
have
contracted
any
of
his
foolish
opinions
,
or
learned
to
sit
over
your
dinner
as
if
it
were
the
best
blessing
of
life
!
You
are
not
sensible
of
the
gain
,
for
your
regard
for
him
has
blinded
you
;
but
,
in
my
estimation
,
your
marrying
early
may
be
the
saving
of
you
.
To
have
seen
you
grow
like
the
Admiral
in
word
or
deed
,
look
or
gesture
,
would
have
broken
my
heart
.
”
“
Well
,
well
,
we
do
not
think
quite
alike
here
.
The
Admiral
has
his
faults
,
but
he
is
a
very
good
man
,
and
has
been
more
than
a
father
to
me
.
Few
fathers
would
have
let
me
have
my
own
way
half
so
much
.
You
must
not
prejudice
Fanny
against
him
.
I
must
have
them
love
one
another
.
”
Mary
refrained
from
saying
what
she
felt
,
that
there
could
not
be
two
persons
in
existence
whose
characters
and
manners
were
less
accordant
:
time
would
discover
it
to
him
;
but
she
could
not
help
this
reflection
on
the
Admiral
.
“
Henry
,
I
think
so
highly
of
Fanny
Price
,
that
if
I
could
suppose
the
next
Mrs
.
Crawford
would
have
half
the
reason
which
my
poor
ill
-
used
aunt
had
to
abhor
the
very
name
,
I
would
prevent
the
marriage
,
if
possible
;
but
I
know
you
:
I
know
that
a
wife
you
loved
would
be
the
happiest
of
women
,
and
that
even
when
you
ceased
to
love
,
she
would
yet
find
in
you
the
liberality
and
good
-
breeding
of
a
gentleman
.
”
The
impossibility
of
not
doing
everything
in
the
world
to
make
Fanny
Price
happy
,
or
of
ceasing
to
love
Fanny
Price
,
was
of
course
the
groundwork
of
his
eloquent
answer
.
“
Had
you
seen
her
this
morning
,
Mary
,
”
he
continued
,
“
attending
with
such
ineffable
sweetness
and
patience
to
all
the
demands
of
her
aunt
’
s
stupidity
,
working
with
her
,
and
for
her
,
her
colour
beautifully
heightened
as
she
leant
over
the
work
,
then
returning
to
her
seat
to
finish
a
note
which
she
was
previously
engaged
in
writing
for
that
stupid
woman
’
s
service
,
and
all
this
with
such
unpretending
gentleness
,
so
much
as
if
it
were
a
matter
of
course
that
she
was
not
to
have
a
moment
at
her
own
command
,
her
hair
arranged
as
neatly
as
it
always
is
,
and
one
little
curl
falling
forward
as
she
wrote
,
which
she
now
and
then
shook
back
,
and
in
the
midst
of
all
this
,
still
speaking
at
intervals
to
me
,
or
listening
,
and
as
if
she
liked
to
listen
,
to
what
I
said
.
Had
you
seen
her
so
,
Mary
,
you
would
not
have
implied
the
possibility
of
her
power
over
my
heart
ever
ceasing
.
”