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William
s
promotion
,
with
all
its
particulars
,
he
was
soon
master
of
;
and
with
such
a
secret
provision
of
comfort
within
his
own
breast
to
help
the
joy
,
he
found
in
it
a
source
of
most
gratifying
sensation
and
unvarying
cheerfulness
all
dinner
-
time
.
After
dinner
,
when
he
and
his
father
were
alone
,
he
had
Fanny
s
history
;
and
then
all
the
great
events
of
the
last
fortnight
,
and
the
present
situation
of
matters
at
Mansfield
were
known
to
him
.
Fanny
suspected
what
was
going
on
.
They
sat
so
much
longer
than
usual
in
the
dining
-
parlour
,
that
she
was
sure
they
must
be
talking
of
her
;
and
when
tea
at
last
brought
them
away
,
and
she
was
to
be
seen
by
Edmund
again
,
she
felt
dreadfully
guilty
.
He
came
to
her
,
sat
down
by
her
,
took
her
hand
,
and
pressed
it
kindly
;
and
at
that
moment
she
thought
that
,
but
for
the
occupation
and
the
scene
which
the
tea
-
things
afforded
,
she
must
have
betrayed
her
emotion
in
some
unpardonable
excess
.
Отключить рекламу
He
was
not
intending
,
however
,
by
such
action
,
to
be
conveying
to
her
that
unqualified
approbation
and
encouragement
which
her
hopes
drew
from
it
.
It
was
designed
only
to
express
his
participation
in
all
that
interested
her
,
and
to
tell
her
that
he
had
been
hearing
what
quickened
every
feeling
of
affection
.
He
was
,
in
fact
,
entirely
on
his
father
s
side
of
the
question
.
His
surprise
was
not
so
great
as
his
father
s
at
her
refusing
Crawford
,
because
,
so
far
from
supposing
her
to
consider
him
with
anything
like
a
preference
,
he
had
always
believed
it
to
be
rather
the
reverse
,
and
could
imagine
her
to
be
taken
perfectly
unprepared
,
but
Sir
Thomas
could
not
regard
the
connexion
as
more
desirable
than
he
did
.
It
had
every
recommendation
to
him
;
and
while
honouring
her
for
what
she
had
done
under
the
influence
of
her
present
indifference
,
honouring
her
in
rather
stronger
terms
than
Sir
Thomas
could
quite
echo
,
he
was
most
earnest
in
hoping
,
and
sanguine
in
believing
,
that
it
would
be
a
match
at
last
,
and
that
,
united
by
mutual
affection
,
it
would
appear
that
their
dispositions
were
as
exactly
fitted
to
make
them
blessed
in
each
other
,
as
he
was
now
beginning
seriously
to
consider
them
.
Crawford
had
been
too
precipitate
.
He
had
not
given
her
time
to
attach
herself
.
He
had
begun
at
the
wrong
end
.
With
such
powers
as
his
,
however
,
and
such
a
disposition
as
hers
,
Edmund
trusted
that
everything
would
work
out
a
happy
conclusion
.
Meanwhile
,
he
saw
enough
of
Fanny
s
embarrassment
to
make
him
scrupulously
guard
against
exciting
it
a
second
time
,
by
any
word
,
or
look
,
or
movement
.
Crawford
called
the
next
day
,
and
on
the
score
of
Edmund
s
return
,
Sir
Thomas
felt
himself
more
than
licensed
to
ask
him
to
stay
dinner
;
it
was
really
a
necessary
compliment
.
He
staid
of
course
,
and
Edmund
had
then
ample
opportunity
for
observing
how
he
sped
with
Fanny
,
and
what
degree
of
immediate
encouragement
for
him
might
be
extracted
from
her
manners
;
and
it
was
so
little
,
so
very
,
very
little
every
chance
,
every
possibility
of
it
,
resting
upon
her
embarrassment
only
;
if
there
was
not
hope
in
her
confusion
,
there
was
hope
in
nothing
else
that
he
was
almost
ready
to
wonder
at
his
friend
s
perseverance
.
Fanny
was
worth
it
all
;
he
held
her
to
be
worth
every
effort
of
patience
,
every
exertion
of
mind
,
but
he
did
not
think
he
could
have
gone
on
himself
with
any
woman
breathing
,
without
something
more
to
warm
his
courage
than
his
eyes
could
discern
in
hers
.
He
was
very
willing
to
hope
that
Crawford
saw
clearer
,
and
this
was
the
most
comfortable
conclusion
for
his
friend
that
he
could
come
to
from
all
that
he
observed
to
pass
before
,
and
at
,
and
after
dinner
.
Отключить рекламу
In
the
evening
a
few
circumstances
occurred
which
he
thought
more
promising
.
When
he
and
Crawford
walked
into
the
drawing
-
room
,
his
mother
and
Fanny
were
sitting
as
intently
and
silently
at
work
as
if
there
were
nothing
else
to
care
for
.
Edmund
could
not
help
noticing
their
apparently
deep
tranquillity
.
We
have
not
been
so
silent
all
the
time
,
replied
his
mother
.
Fanny
has
been
reading
to
me
,
and
only
put
the
book
down
upon
hearing
you
coming
.
And
sure
enough
there
was
a
book
on
the
table
which
had
the
air
of
being
very
recently
closed
:
a
volume
of
Shakespeare
.
She
often
reads
to
me
out
of
those
books
;
and
she
was
in
the
middle
of
a
very
fine
speech
of
that
man
s
what
s
his
name
,
Fanny
?
when
we
heard
your
footsteps
.
Crawford
took
the
volume
.
Let
me
have
the
pleasure
of
finishing
that
speech
to
your
ladyship
,
said
he
.
I
shall
find
it
immediately
.
And
by
carefully
giving
way
to
the
inclination
of
the
leaves
,
he
did
find
it
,
or
within
a
page
or
two
,
quite
near
enough
to
satisfy
Lady
Bertram
,
who
assured
him
,
as
soon
as
he
mentioned
the
name
of
Cardinal
Wolsey
,
that
he
had
got
the
very
speech
.