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It
is
above
a
week
since
I
saw
Miss
Crawford
.
Yes
,
she
laments
it
;
yet
owns
it
may
have
been
best
.
You
will
see
her
,
however
,
before
she
goes
.
She
is
very
angry
with
you
,
Fanny
;
you
must
be
prepared
for
that
.
She
calls
herself
very
angry
,
but
you
can
imagine
her
anger
.
It
is
the
regret
and
disappointment
of
a
sister
,
who
thinks
her
brother
has
a
right
to
everything
he
may
wish
for
,
at
the
first
moment
.
She
is
hurt
,
as
you
would
be
for
William
;
but
she
loves
and
esteems
you
with
all
her
heart
.
I
knew
she
would
be
very
angry
with
me
.
Отключить рекламу
My
dearest
Fanny
,
cried
Edmund
,
pressing
her
arm
closer
to
him
,
do
not
let
the
idea
of
her
anger
distress
you
.
It
is
anger
to
be
talked
of
rather
than
felt
.
Her
heart
is
made
for
love
and
kindness
,
not
for
resentment
.
I
wish
you
could
have
overheard
her
tribute
of
praise
;
I
wish
you
could
have
seen
her
countenance
,
when
she
said
that
you
should
be
Henry
s
wife
.
And
I
observed
that
she
always
spoke
of
you
as
Fanny
,
which
she
was
never
used
to
do
;
and
it
had
a
sound
of
most
sisterly
cordiality
.
And
Mrs
.
Grant
,
did
she
say
did
she
speak
;
was
she
there
all
the
time
?
Yes
,
she
was
agreeing
exactly
with
her
sister
.
The
surprise
of
your
refusal
,
Fanny
,
seems
to
have
been
unbounded
.
That
you
could
refuse
such
a
man
as
Henry
Crawford
seems
more
than
they
can
understand
.
I
said
what
I
could
for
you
;
but
in
good
truth
,
as
they
stated
the
case
you
must
prove
yourself
to
be
in
your
senses
as
soon
as
you
can
by
a
different
conduct
;
nothing
else
will
satisfy
them
.
But
this
is
teasing
you
.
I
have
done
.
Do
not
turn
away
from
me
.
Отключить рекламу
I
should
have
thought
,
said
Fanny
,
after
a
pause
of
recollection
and
exertion
,
that
every
woman
must
have
felt
the
possibility
of
a
man
s
not
being
approved
,
not
being
loved
by
some
one
of
her
sex
at
least
,
let
him
be
ever
so
generally
agreeable
.
Let
him
have
all
the
perfections
in
the
world
,
I
think
it
ought
not
to
be
set
down
as
certain
that
a
man
must
be
acceptable
to
every
woman
he
may
happen
to
like
himself
.
But
,
even
supposing
it
is
so
,
allowing
Mr
.
Crawford
to
have
all
the
claims
which
his
sisters
think
he
has
,
how
was
I
to
be
prepared
to
meet
him
with
any
feeling
answerable
to
his
own
?
He
took
me
wholly
by
surprise
.
I
had
not
an
idea
that
his
behaviour
to
me
before
had
any
meaning
;
and
surely
I
was
not
to
be
teaching
myself
to
like
him
only
because
he
was
taking
what
seemed
very
idle
notice
of
me
.
In
my
situation
,
it
would
have
been
the
extreme
of
vanity
to
be
forming
expectations
on
Mr
.
Crawford
.
I
am
sure
his
sisters
,
rating
him
as
they
do
,
must
have
thought
it
so
,
supposing
he
had
meant
nothing
.
How
,
then
,
was
I
to
be
to
be
in
love
with
him
the
moment
he
said
he
was
with
me
?
How
was
I
to
have
an
attachment
at
his
service
,
as
soon
as
it
was
asked
for
?
His
sisters
should
consider
me
as
well
as
him
.
The
higher
his
deserts
,
the
more
improper
for
me
ever
to
have
thought
of
him
.
And
,
and
we
think
very
differently
of
the
nature
of
women
,
if
they
can
imagine
a
woman
so
very
soon
capable
of
returning
an
affection
as
this
seems
to
imply
.
My
dear
,
dear
Fanny
,
now
I
have
the
truth
.
I
know
this
to
be
the
truth
;
and
most
worthy
of
you
are
such
feelings
.
I
had
attributed
them
to
you
before
.
I
thought
I
could
understand
you
.
You
have
now
given
exactly
the
explanation
which
I
ventured
to
make
for
you
to
your
friend
and
Mrs
.
Grant
,
and
they
were
both
better
satisfied
,
though
your
warm
-
hearted
friend
was
still
run
away
with
a
little
by
the
enthusiasm
of
her
fondness
for
Henry
.
I
told
them
that
you
were
of
all
human
creatures
the
one
over
whom
habit
had
most
power
and
novelty
least
;
and
that
the
very
circumstance
of
the
novelty
of
Crawford
s
addresses
was
against
him
.
Their
being
so
new
and
so
recent
was
all
in
their
disfavour
;
that
you
could
tolerate
nothing
that
you
were
not
used
to
;
and
a
great
deal
more
to
the
same
purpose
,
to
give
them
a
knowledge
of
your
character
.
Miss
Crawford
made
us
laugh
by
her
plans
of
encouragement
for
her
brother
.
She
meant
to
urge
him
to
persevere
in
the
hope
of
being
loved
in
time
,
and
of
having
his
addresses
most
kindly
received
at
the
end
of
about
ten
years
happy
marriage
.