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One
morning
,
about
this
time
,
Fanny
having
now
been
nearly
four
weeks
from
Mansfield
,
a
point
which
she
never
failed
to
think
over
and
calculate
every
day
,
as
she
and
Susan
were
preparing
to
remove
,
as
usual
,
upstairs
,
they
were
stopped
by
the
knock
of
a
visitor
,
whom
they
felt
they
could
not
avoid
,
from
Rebecca
s
alertness
in
going
to
the
door
,
a
duty
which
always
interested
her
beyond
any
other
.
It
was
a
gentleman
s
voice
;
it
was
a
voice
that
Fanny
was
just
turning
pale
about
,
when
Mr
.
Crawford
walked
into
the
room
.
Good
sense
,
like
hers
,
will
always
act
when
really
called
upon
;
and
she
found
that
she
had
been
able
to
name
him
to
her
mother
,
and
recall
her
remembrance
of
the
name
,
as
that
of
William
s
friend
,
though
she
could
not
previously
have
believed
herself
capable
of
uttering
a
syllable
at
such
a
moment
.
The
consciousness
of
his
being
known
there
only
as
William
s
friend
was
some
support
.
Having
introduced
him
,
however
,
and
being
all
reseated
,
the
terrors
that
occurred
of
what
this
visit
might
lead
to
were
overpowering
,
and
she
fancied
herself
on
the
point
of
fainting
away
.
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While
trying
to
keep
herself
alive
,
their
visitor
,
who
had
at
first
approached
her
with
as
animated
a
countenance
as
ever
,
was
wisely
and
kindly
keeping
his
eyes
away
,
and
giving
her
time
to
recover
,
while
he
devoted
himself
entirely
to
her
mother
,
addressing
her
,
and
attending
to
her
with
the
utmost
politeness
and
propriety
,
at
the
same
time
with
a
degree
of
friendliness
,
of
interest
at
least
,
which
was
making
his
manner
perfect
.
Mrs
.
Price
s
manners
were
also
at
their
best
.
Warmed
by
the
sight
of
such
a
friend
to
her
son
,
and
regulated
by
the
wish
of
appearing
to
advantage
before
him
,
she
was
overflowing
with
gratitude
artless
,
maternal
gratitude
which
could
not
be
unpleasing
.
Mr
.
Price
was
out
,
which
she
regretted
very
much
.
Fanny
was
just
recovered
enough
to
feel
that
she
could
not
regret
it
;
for
to
her
many
other
sources
of
uneasiness
was
added
the
severe
one
of
shame
for
the
home
in
which
he
found
her
.
She
might
scold
herself
for
the
weakness
,
but
there
was
no
scolding
it
away
.
She
was
ashamed
,
and
she
would
have
been
yet
more
ashamed
of
her
father
than
of
all
the
rest
.
They
talked
of
William
,
a
subject
on
which
Mrs
.
Price
could
never
tire
;
and
Mr
.
Crawford
was
as
warm
in
his
commendation
as
even
her
heart
could
wish
.
She
felt
that
she
had
never
seen
so
agreeable
a
man
in
her
life
;
and
was
only
astonished
to
find
that
,
so
great
and
so
agreeable
as
he
was
,
he
should
be
come
down
to
Portsmouth
neither
on
a
visit
to
the
port
-
admiral
,
nor
the
commissioner
,
nor
yet
with
the
intention
of
going
over
to
the
island
,
nor
of
seeing
the
dockyard
.
Nothing
of
all
that
she
had
been
used
to
think
of
as
the
proof
of
importance
,
or
the
employment
of
wealth
,
had
brought
him
to
Portsmouth
.
He
had
reached
it
late
the
night
before
,
was
come
for
a
day
or
two
,
was
staying
at
the
Crown
,
had
accidentally
met
with
a
navy
officer
or
two
of
his
acquaintance
since
his
arrival
,
but
had
no
object
of
that
kind
in
coming
.
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By
the
time
he
had
given
all
this
information
,
it
was
not
unreasonable
to
suppose
that
Fanny
might
be
looked
at
and
spoken
to
;
and
she
was
tolerably
able
to
bear
his
eye
,
and
hear
that
he
had
spent
half
an
hour
with
his
sister
the
evening
before
his
leaving
London
;
that
she
had
sent
her
best
and
kindest
love
,
but
had
had
no
time
for
writing
;
that
he
thought
himself
lucky
in
seeing
Mary
for
even
half
an
hour
,
having
spent
scarcely
twenty
-
four
hours
in
London
,
after
his
return
from
Norfolk
,
before
he
set
off
again
;
that
her
cousin
Edmund
was
in
town
,
had
been
in
town
,
he
understood
,
a
few
days
;
that
he
had
not
seen
him
himself
,
but
that
he
was
well
,
had
left
them
all
well
at
Mansfield
,
and
was
to
dine
,
as
yesterday
,
with
the
Frasers
.
Fanny
listened
collectedly
,
even
to
the
last
-
mentioned
circumstance
;
nay
,
it
seemed
a
relief
to
her
worn
mind
to
be
at
any
certainty
;
and
the
words
,
then
by
this
time
it
is
all
settled
,
passed
internally
,
without
more
evidence
of
emotion
than
a
faint
blush
.
After
talking
a
little
more
about
Mansfield
,
a
subject
in
which
her
interest
was
most
apparent
,
Crawford
began
to
hint
at
the
expediency
of
an
early
walk
.