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Her
disappointment
in
her
mother
was
greater
:
there
she
had
hoped
much
,
and
found
almost
nothing
.
Every
flattering
scheme
of
being
of
consequence
to
her
soon
fell
to
the
ground
.
Mrs
.
Price
was
not
unkind
;
but
,
instead
of
gaining
on
her
affection
and
confidence
,
and
becoming
more
and
more
dear
,
her
daughter
never
met
with
greater
kindness
from
her
than
on
the
first
day
of
her
arrival
.
The
instinct
of
nature
was
soon
satisfied
,
and
Mrs
.
Price
s
attachment
had
no
other
source
.
Her
heart
and
her
time
were
already
quite
full
;
she
had
neither
leisure
nor
affection
to
bestow
on
Fanny
.
Her
daughters
never
had
been
much
to
her
.
She
was
fond
of
her
sons
,
especially
of
William
,
but
Betsey
was
the
first
of
her
girls
whom
she
had
ever
much
regarded
.
To
her
she
was
most
injudiciously
indulgent
.
William
was
her
pride
;
Betsey
her
darling
;
and
John
,
Richard
,
Sam
,
Tom
,
and
Charles
occupied
all
the
rest
of
her
maternal
solicitude
,
alternately
her
worries
and
her
comforts
.
These
shared
her
heart
:
her
time
was
given
chiefly
to
her
house
and
her
servants
.
Her
days
were
spent
in
a
kind
of
slow
bustle
;
all
was
busy
without
getting
on
,
always
behindhand
and
lamenting
it
,
without
altering
her
ways
;
wishing
to
be
an
economist
,
without
contrivance
or
regularity
;
dissatisfied
with
her
servants
,
without
skill
to
make
them
better
,
and
whether
helping
,
or
reprimanding
,
or
indulging
them
,
without
any
power
of
engaging
their
respect
.
Of
her
two
sisters
,
Mrs
.
Price
very
much
more
resembled
Lady
Bertram
than
Mrs
.
Norris
.
She
was
a
manager
by
necessity
,
without
any
of
Mrs
.
Norris
s
inclination
for
it
,
or
any
of
her
activity
.
Her
disposition
was
naturally
easy
and
indolent
,
like
Lady
Bertram
s
;
and
a
situation
of
similar
affluence
and
do
-
nothingness
would
have
been
much
more
suited
to
her
capacity
than
the
exertions
and
self
-
denials
of
the
one
which
her
imprudent
marriage
had
placed
her
in
.
She
might
have
made
just
as
good
a
woman
of
consequence
as
Lady
Bertram
,
but
Mrs
.
Norris
would
have
been
a
more
respectable
mother
of
nine
children
on
a
small
income
.
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Much
of
all
this
Fanny
could
not
but
be
sensible
of
.
She
might
scruple
to
make
use
of
the
words
,
but
she
must
and
did
feel
that
her
mother
was
a
partial
,
ill
-
judging
parent
,
a
dawdle
,
a
slattern
,
who
neither
taught
nor
restrained
her
children
,
whose
house
was
the
scene
of
mismanagement
and
discomfort
from
beginning
to
end
,
and
who
had
no
talent
,
no
conversation
,
no
affection
towards
herself
;
no
curiosity
to
know
her
better
,
no
desire
of
her
friendship
,
and
no
inclination
for
her
company
that
could
lessen
her
sense
of
such
feelings
.
Fanny
was
very
anxious
to
be
useful
,
and
not
to
appear
above
her
home
,
or
in
any
way
disqualified
or
disinclined
,
by
her
foreign
education
,
from
contributing
her
help
to
its
comforts
,
and
therefore
set
about
working
for
Sam
immediately
;
and
by
working
early
and
late
,
with
perseverance
and
great
despatch
,
did
so
much
that
the
boy
was
shipped
off
at
last
,
with
more
than
half
his
linen
ready
.
She
had
great
pleasure
in
feeling
her
usefulness
,
but
could
not
conceive
how
they
would
have
managed
without
her
.
Sam
,
loud
and
overbearing
as
he
was
,
she
rather
regretted
when
he
went
,
for
he
was
clever
and
intelligent
,
and
glad
to
be
employed
in
any
errand
in
the
town
;
and
though
spurning
the
remonstrances
of
Susan
,
given
as
they
were
,
though
very
reasonable
in
themselves
,
with
ill
-
timed
and
powerless
warmth
,
was
beginning
to
be
influenced
by
Fanny
s
services
and
gentle
persuasions
;
and
she
found
that
the
best
of
the
three
younger
ones
was
gone
in
him
:
Tom
and
Charles
being
at
least
as
many
years
as
they
were
his
juniors
distant
from
that
age
of
feeling
and
reason
,
which
might
suggest
the
expediency
of
making
friends
,
and
of
endeavouring
to
be
less
disagreeable
.
Their
sister
soon
despaired
of
making
the
smallest
impression
on
them
;
they
were
quite
untameable
by
any
means
of
address
which
she
had
spirits
or
time
to
attempt
.
Every
afternoon
brought
a
return
of
their
riotous
games
all
over
the
house
;
and
she
very
early
learned
to
sigh
at
the
approach
of
Saturday
s
constant
half
-
holiday
.
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Betsey
,
too
,
a
spoiled
child
,
trained
up
to
think
the
alphabet
her
greatest
enemy
,
left
to
be
with
the
servants
at
her
pleasure
,
and
then
encouraged
to
report
any
evil
of
them
,
she
was
almost
as
ready
to
despair
of
being
able
to
love
or
assist
;
and
of
Susan
s
temper
she
had
many
doubts
.
Her
continual
disagreements
with
her
mother
,
her
rash
squabbles
with
Tom
and
Charles
,
and
petulance
with
Betsey
,
were
at
least
so
distressing
to
Fanny
that
,
though
admitting
they
were
by
no
means
without
provocation
,
she
feared
the
disposition
that
could
push
them
to
such
length
must
be
far
from
amiable
,
and
from
affording
any
repose
to
herself
.
Such
was
the
home
which
was
to
put
Mansfield
out
of
her
head
,
and
teach
her
to
think
of
her
cousin
Edmund
with
moderated
feelings
.
On
the
contrary
,
she
could
think
of
nothing
but
Mansfield
,
its
beloved
inmates
,
its
happy
ways
.
Everything
where
she
now
was
in
full
contrast
to
it
.
The
elegance
,
propriety
,
regularity
,
harmony
,
and
perhaps
,
above
all
,
the
peace
and
tranquillity
of
Mansfield
,
were
brought
to
her
remembrance
every
hour
of
the
day
,
by
the
prevalence
of
everything
opposite
to
them
here
.
The
living
in
incessant
noise
was
,
to
a
frame
and
temper
delicate
and
nervous
like
Fanny
s
,
an
evil
which
no
superadded
elegance
or
harmony
could
have
entirely
atoned
for
.
It
was
the
greatest
misery
of
all
.
At
Mansfield
,
no
sounds
of
contention
,
no
raised
voice
,
no
abrupt
bursts
,
no
tread
of
violence
,
was
ever
heard
;
all
proceeded
in
a
regular
course
of
cheerful
orderliness
;
everybody
had
their
due
importance
;
everybody
s
feelings
were
consulted
.
If
tenderness
could
be
ever
supposed
wanting
,
good
sense
and
good
breeding
supplied
its
place
;
and
as
to
the
little
irritations
sometimes
introduced
by
aunt
Norris
,
they
were
short
,
they
were
trifling
,
they
were
as
a
drop
of
water
to
the
ocean
,
compared
with
the
ceaseless
tumult
of
her
present
abode
.
Here
everybody
was
noisy
,
every
voice
was
loud
(
excepting
,
perhaps
,
her
mother
s
,
which
resembled
the
soft
monotony
of
Lady
Bertram
s
,
only
worn
into
fretfulness
)
.
Whatever
was
wanted
was
hallooed
for
,
and
the
servants
hallooed
out
their
excuses
from
the
kitchen