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I
am
persuaded
that
he
does
not
think
,
as
he
ought
,
on
serious
subjects
.
Say
,
rather
,
that
he
has
not
thought
at
all
upon
serious
subjects
,
which
I
believe
to
be
a
good
deal
the
case
.
How
could
it
be
otherwise
,
with
such
an
education
and
adviser
?
Under
the
disadvantages
,
indeed
,
which
both
have
had
,
is
it
not
wonderful
that
they
should
be
what
they
are
?
Crawford
s
feelings
,
I
am
ready
to
acknowledge
,
have
hitherto
been
too
much
his
guides
.
Happily
,
those
feelings
have
generally
been
good
.
You
will
supply
the
rest
;
and
a
most
fortunate
man
he
is
to
attach
himself
to
such
a
creature
to
a
woman
who
,
firm
as
a
rock
in
her
own
principles
,
has
a
gentleness
of
character
so
well
adapted
to
recommend
them
.
He
has
chosen
his
partner
,
indeed
,
with
rare
felicity
.
He
will
make
you
happy
,
Fanny
;
I
know
he
will
make
you
happy
;
but
you
will
make
him
everything
.
Отключить рекламу
I
would
not
engage
in
such
a
charge
,
cried
Fanny
,
in
a
shrinking
accent
;
in
such
an
office
of
high
responsibility
!
As
usual
,
believing
yourself
unequal
to
anything
!
fancying
everything
too
much
for
you
!
Well
,
though
I
may
not
be
able
to
persuade
you
into
different
feelings
,
you
will
be
persuaded
into
them
,
I
trust
.
I
confess
myself
sincerely
anxious
that
you
may
.
I
have
no
common
interest
in
Crawford
s
well
-
doing
.
Next
to
your
happiness
,
Fanny
,
his
has
the
first
claim
on
me
.
You
are
aware
of
my
having
no
common
interest
in
Crawford
.
Fanny
was
too
well
aware
of
it
to
have
anything
to
say
;
and
they
walked
on
together
some
fifty
yards
in
mutual
silence
and
abstraction
.
Edmund
first
began
again
I
was
very
much
pleased
by
her
manner
of
speaking
of
it
yesterday
,
particularly
pleased
,
because
I
had
not
depended
upon
her
seeing
everything
in
so
just
a
light
.
I
knew
she
was
very
fond
of
you
;
but
yet
I
was
afraid
of
her
not
estimating
your
worth
to
her
brother
quite
as
it
deserved
,
and
of
her
regretting
that
he
had
not
rather
fixed
on
some
woman
of
distinction
or
fortune
.
I
was
afraid
of
the
bias
of
those
worldly
maxims
,
which
she
has
been
too
much
used
to
hear
.
But
it
was
very
different
.
She
spoke
of
you
,
Fanny
,
just
as
she
ought
.
She
desires
the
connexion
as
warmly
as
your
uncle
or
myself
.
We
had
a
long
talk
about
it
.
Отключить рекламу
I
should
not
have
mentioned
the
subject
,
though
very
anxious
to
know
her
sentiments
;
but
I
had
not
been
in
the
room
five
minutes
before
she
began
introducing
it
with
all
that
openness
of
heart
,
and
sweet
peculiarity
of
manner
,
that
spirit
and
ingenuousness
which
are
so
much
a
part
of
herself
.
Mrs
.
Grant
laughed
at
her
for
her
rapidity
.
Was
Mrs
.
Grant
in
the
room
,
then
?
Yes
,
when
I
reached
the
house
I
found
the
two
sisters
together
by
themselves
;
and
when
once
we
had
begun
,
we
had
not
done
with
you
,
Fanny
,
till
Crawford
and
Dr
.
Grant
came
in
.