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- Джейн Остен
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- Мэнсфилд Парк
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- Стр. 187/228
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Poor
Fanny
’
s
mind
was
thrown
into
the
most
distressing
of
all
its
varieties
.
The
recollection
of
what
had
been
done
for
William
was
always
the
most
powerful
disturber
of
every
decision
against
Mr
.
Crawford
;
and
she
sat
thinking
deeply
of
it
till
Mary
,
who
had
been
first
watching
her
complacently
,
and
then
musing
on
something
else
,
suddenly
called
her
attention
by
saying
:
“
I
should
like
to
sit
talking
with
you
here
all
day
,
but
we
must
not
forget
the
ladies
below
,
and
so
good
-
bye
,
my
dear
,
my
amiable
,
my
excellent
Fanny
,
for
though
we
shall
nominally
part
in
the
breakfast
-
parlour
,
I
must
take
leave
of
you
here
.
And
I
do
take
leave
,
longing
for
a
happy
reunion
,
and
trusting
that
when
we
meet
again
,
it
will
be
under
circumstances
which
may
open
our
hearts
to
each
other
without
any
remnant
or
shadow
of
reserve
.
”
A
very
,
very
kind
embrace
,
and
some
agitation
of
manner
,
accompanied
these
words
.
“
I
shall
see
your
cousin
in
town
soon
:
he
talks
of
being
there
tolerably
soon
;
and
Sir
Thomas
,
I
dare
say
,
in
the
course
of
the
spring
;
and
your
eldest
cousin
,
and
the
Rushworths
,
and
Julia
,
I
am
sure
of
meeting
again
and
again
,
and
all
but
you
.
I
have
two
favours
to
ask
,
Fanny
:
one
is
your
correspondence
.
You
must
write
to
me
.
And
the
other
,
that
you
will
often
call
on
Mrs
.
Grant
,
and
make
her
amends
for
my
being
gone
.
”
The
first
,
at
least
,
of
these
favours
Fanny
would
rather
not
have
been
asked
;
but
it
was
impossible
for
her
to
refuse
the
correspondence
;
it
was
impossible
for
her
even
not
to
accede
to
it
more
readily
than
her
own
judgment
authorised
.
There
was
no
resisting
so
much
apparent
affection
.
Her
disposition
was
peculiarly
calculated
to
value
a
fond
treatment
,
and
from
having
hitherto
known
so
little
of
it
,
she
was
the
more
overcome
by
Miss
Crawford
’
s
.
Besides
,
there
was
gratitude
towards
her
,
for
having
made
their
tete
-
a
-
tete
so
much
less
painful
than
her
fears
had
predicted
.
It
was
over
,
and
she
had
escaped
without
reproaches
and
without
detection
.
Her
secret
was
still
her
own
;
and
while
that
was
the
case
,
she
thought
she
could
resign
herself
to
almost
everything
.
In
the
evening
there
was
another
parting
.
Henry
Crawford
came
and
sat
some
time
with
them
;
and
her
spirits
not
being
previously
in
the
strongest
state
,
her
heart
was
softened
for
a
while
towards
him
,
because
he
really
seemed
to
feel
.
Quite
unlike
his
usual
self
,
he
scarcely
said
anything
.
He
was
evidently
oppressed
,
and
Fanny
must
grieve
for
him
,
though
hoping
she
might
never
see
him
again
till
he
were
the
husband
of
some
other
woman
When
it
came
to
the
moment
of
parting
,
he
would
take
her
hand
,
he
would
not
be
denied
it
;
he
said
nothing
,
however
,
or
nothing
that
she
heard
,
and
when
he
had
left
the
room
,
she
was
better
pleased
that
such
a
token
of
friendship
had
passed
.
On
the
morrow
the
Crawfords
were
gone
.
Mr
.
Crawford
gone
,
Sir
Thomas
’
s
next
object
was
that
he
should
be
missed
;
and
he
entertained
great
hope
that
his
niece
would
find
a
blank
in
the
loss
of
those
attentions
which
at
the
time
she
had
felt
,
or
fancied
,
an
evil
.
She
had
tasted
of
consequence
in
its
most
flattering
form
;
and
he
did
hope
that
the
loss
of
it
,
the
sinking
again
into
nothing
,
would
awaken
very
wholesome
regrets
in
her
mind
.
He
watched
her
with
this
idea
;
but
he
could
hardly
tell
with
what
success
.
He
hardly
knew
whether
there
were
any
difference
in
her
spirits
or
not
.
She
was
always
so
gentle
and
retiring
that
her
emotions
were
beyond
his
discrimination
.
He
did
not
understand
her
:
he
felt
that
he
did
not
;
and
therefore
applied
to
Edmund
to
tell
him
how
she
stood
affected
on
the
present
occasion
,
and
whether
she
were
more
or
less
happy
than
she
had
been
.
Edmund
did
not
discern
any
symptoms
of
regret
,
and
thought
his
father
a
little
unreasonable
in
supposing
the
first
three
or
four
days
could
produce
any
.