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As
far
as
you
have
gone
,
Fanny
,
I
think
you
perfectly
right
.
I
may
be
sorry
,
I
may
be
surprised
though
hardly
that
,
for
you
had
not
had
time
to
attach
yourself
but
I
think
you
perfectly
right
.
Can
it
admit
of
a
question
?
It
is
disgraceful
to
us
if
it
does
.
You
did
not
love
him
;
nothing
could
have
justified
your
accepting
him
.
Fanny
had
not
felt
so
comfortable
for
days
and
days
.
So
far
your
conduct
has
been
faultless
,
and
they
were
quite
mistaken
who
wished
you
to
do
otherwise
.
But
the
matter
does
not
end
here
.
Crawford
s
is
no
common
attachment
;
he
perseveres
,
with
the
hope
of
creating
that
regard
which
had
not
been
created
before
.
This
,
we
know
,
must
be
a
work
of
time
.
But
(
with
an
affectionate
smile
)
let
him
succeed
at
last
,
Fanny
,
let
him
succeed
at
last
.
Отключить рекламу
You
have
proved
yourself
upright
and
disinterested
,
prove
yourself
grateful
and
tender
-
hearted
;
and
then
you
will
be
the
perfect
model
of
a
woman
which
I
have
always
believed
you
born
for
.
Oh
!
never
,
never
,
never
!
he
never
will
succeed
with
me
.
And
she
spoke
with
a
warmth
which
quite
astonished
Edmund
,
and
which
she
blushed
at
the
recollection
of
herself
,
when
she
saw
his
look
,
and
heard
him
reply
,
Never
!
Fanny
!
so
very
determined
and
positive
!
This
is
not
like
yourself
,
your
rational
self
.
I
mean
,
she
cried
,
sorrowfully
correcting
herself
,
that
I
think
I
never
shall
,
as
far
as
the
future
can
be
answered
for
;
I
think
I
never
shall
return
his
regard
.
I
must
hope
better
things
.
I
am
aware
,
more
aware
than
Crawford
can
be
,
that
the
man
who
means
to
make
you
love
him
(
you
having
due
notice
of
his
intentions
)
must
have
very
uphill
work
,
for
there
are
all
your
early
attachments
and
habits
in
battle
array
;
and
before
he
can
get
your
heart
for
his
own
use
he
has
to
unfasten
it
from
all
the
holds
upon
things
animate
and
inanimate
,
which
so
many
years
growth
have
confirmed
,
and
which
are
considerably
tightened
for
the
moment
by
the
very
idea
of
separation
.
I
know
that
the
apprehension
of
being
forced
to
quit
Mansfield
will
for
a
time
be
arming
you
against
him
.
I
wish
he
had
not
been
obliged
to
tell
you
what
he
was
trying
for
.
I
wish
he
had
known
you
as
well
as
I
do
,
Fanny
.
Between
us
,
I
think
we
should
have
won
you
.
My
theoretical
and
his
practical
knowledge
together
could
not
have
failed
.
He
should
have
worked
upon
my
plans
.
Отключить рекламу
I
must
hope
,
however
,
that
time
,
proving
him
(
as
I
firmly
believe
it
will
)
to
deserve
you
by
his
steady
affection
,
will
give
him
his
reward
.
I
cannot
suppose
that
you
have
not
the
wish
to
love
him
the
natural
wish
of
gratitude
.
You
must
have
some
feeling
of
that
sort
.
You
must
be
sorry
for
your
own
indifference
.
We
are
so
totally
unlike
,
said
Fanny
,
avoiding
a
direct
answer
,
we
are
so
very
,
very
different
in
all
our
inclinations
and
ways
,
that
I
consider
it
as
quite
impossible
we
should
ever
be
tolerably
happy
together
,
even
if
I
could
like
him
.
There
never
were
two
people
more
dissimilar
.
We
have
not
one
taste
in
common
.
We
should
be
miserable
.
You
are
mistaken
,
Fanny
.
The
dissimilarity
is
not
so
strong
.
You
are
quite
enough
alike
.
You
have
tastes
in
common
.
You
have
moral
and
literary
tastes
in
common
.
You
have
both
warm
hearts
and
benevolent
feelings
;
and
,
Fanny
,
who
that
heard
him
read
,
and
saw
you
listen
to
Shakespeare
the
other
night
,
will
think
you
unfitted
as
companions
?
You
forget
yourself
:
there
is
a
decided
difference
in
your
tempers
,
I
allow
.
He
is
lively
,
you
are
serious
;
but
so
much
the
better
:
his
spirits
will
support
yours
.
It
is
your
disposition
to
be
easily
dejected
and
to
fancy
difficulties
greater
than
they
are
.
His
cheerfulness
will
counteract
this
.
He
sees
difficulties
nowhere
:
and
his
pleasantness
and
gaiety
will
be
a
constant
support
to
you
.
Your
being
so
far
unlike
,
Fanny
,
does
not
in
the
smallest
degree
make
against
the
probability
of
your
happiness
together
:
do
not
imagine
it
.
I
am
myself
convinced
that
it
is
rather
a
favourable
circumstance
.