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- Джейн Остен
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- Мэнсфилд Парк
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“
It
was
a
lovely
morning
,
and
at
that
season
of
the
year
a
fine
morning
so
often
turned
off
,
that
it
was
wisest
for
everybody
not
to
delay
their
exercise
”
;
and
such
hints
producing
nothing
,
he
soon
proceeded
to
a
positive
recommendation
to
Mrs
.
Price
and
her
daughters
to
take
their
walk
without
loss
of
time
.
Now
they
came
to
an
understanding
.
Mrs
.
Price
,
it
appeared
,
scarcely
ever
stirred
out
of
doors
,
except
of
a
Sunday
;
she
owned
she
could
seldom
,
with
her
large
family
,
find
time
for
a
walk
.
“
Would
she
not
,
then
,
persuade
her
daughters
to
take
advantage
of
such
weather
,
and
allow
him
the
pleasure
of
attending
them
?
”
Mrs
.
Price
was
greatly
obliged
and
very
complying
.
“
Her
daughters
were
very
much
confined
;
Portsmouth
was
a
sad
place
;
they
did
not
often
get
out
;
and
she
knew
they
had
some
errands
in
the
town
,
which
they
would
be
very
glad
to
do
.
”
And
the
consequence
was
,
that
Fanny
,
strange
as
it
was
—
strange
,
awkward
,
and
distressing
—
found
herself
and
Susan
,
within
ten
minutes
,
walking
towards
the
High
Street
with
Mr
.
Crawford
.
It
was
soon
pain
upon
pain
,
confusion
upon
confusion
;
for
they
were
hardly
in
the
High
Street
before
they
met
her
father
,
whose
appearance
was
not
the
better
from
its
being
Saturday
.
He
stopt
;
and
,
ungentlemanlike
as
he
looked
,
Fanny
was
obliged
to
introduce
him
to
Mr
.
Crawford
.
She
could
not
have
a
doubt
of
the
manner
in
which
Mr
.
Crawford
must
be
struck
.
He
must
be
ashamed
and
disgusted
altogether
.
He
must
soon
give
her
up
,
and
cease
to
have
the
smallest
inclination
for
the
match
;
and
yet
,
though
she
had
been
so
much
wanting
his
affection
to
be
cured
,
this
was
a
sort
of
cure
that
would
be
almost
as
bad
as
the
complaint
;
and
I
believe
there
is
scarcely
a
young
lady
in
the
United
Kingdoms
who
would
not
rather
put
up
with
the
misfortune
of
being
sought
by
a
clever
,
agreeable
man
,
than
have
him
driven
away
by
the
vulgarity
of
her
nearest
relations
.
Mr
.
Crawford
probably
could
not
regard
his
future
father
-
in
-
law
with
any
idea
of
taking
him
for
a
model
in
dress
;
but
(
as
Fanny
instantly
,
and
to
her
great
relief
,
discerned
)
her
father
was
a
very
different
man
,
a
very
different
Mr
.
Price
in
his
behaviour
to
this
most
highly
respected
stranger
,
from
what
he
was
in
his
own
family
at
home
.
His
manners
now
,
though
not
polished
,
were
more
than
passable
:
they
were
grateful
,
animated
,
manly
;
his
expressions
were
those
of
an
attached
father
,
and
a
sensible
man
;
his
loud
tones
did
very
well
in
the
open
air
,
and
there
was
not
a
single
oath
to
be
heard
.
Such
was
his
instinctive
compliment
to
the
good
manners
of
Mr
.
Crawford
;
and
,
be
the
consequence
what
it
might
,
Fanny
’
s
immediate
feelings
were
infinitely
soothed
.
The
conclusion
of
the
two
gentlemen
’
s
civilities
was
an
offer
of
Mr
.
Price
’
s
to
take
Mr
.
Crawford
into
the
dockyard
,
which
Mr
.
Crawford
,
desirous
of
accepting
as
a
favour
what
was
intended
as
such
,
though
he
had
seen
the
dockyard
again
and
again
,
and
hoping
to
be
so
much
the
longer
with
Fanny
,
was
very
gratefully
disposed
to
avail
himself
of
,
if
the
Miss
Prices
were
not
afraid
of
the
fatigue
;
and
as
it
was
somehow
or
other
ascertained
,
or
inferred
,
or
at
least
acted
upon
,
that
they
were
not
at
all
afraid
,
to
the
dockyard
they
were
all
to
go
;
and
but
for
Mr
.
Crawford
,
Mr
.
Price
would
have
turned
thither
directly
,
without
the
smallest
consideration
for
his
daughters
’
errands
in
the
High
Street
.
He
took
care
,
however
,
that
they
should
be
allowed
to
go
to
the
shops
they
came
out
expressly
to
visit
;
and
it
did
not
delay
them
long
,
for
Fanny
could
so
little
bear
to
excite
impatience
,
or
be
waited
for
,
that
before
the
gentlemen
,
as
they
stood
at
the
door
,
could
do
more
than
begin
upon
the
last
naval
regulations
,
or
settle
the
number
of
three
-
deckers
now
in
commission
,
their
companions
were
ready
to
proceed
.
They
were
then
to
set
forward
for
the
dockyard
at
once
,
and
the
walk
would
have
been
conducted
—
according
to
Mr
.
Crawford
’
s
opinion
—
in
a
singular
manner
,
had
Mr
.
Price
been
allowed
the
entire
regulation
of
it
,
as
the
two
girls
,
he
found
,
would
have
been
left
to
follow
,
and
keep
up
with
them
or
not
,
as
they
could
,
while
they
walked
on
together
at
their
own
hasty
pace
.
He
was
able
to
introduce
some
improvement
occasionally
,
though
by
no
means
to
the
extent
he
wished
;
he
absolutely
would
not
walk
away
from
them
;
and
at
any
crossing
or
any
crowd
,
when
Mr
.
Price
was
only
calling
out
,
“
Come
,
girls
;
come
,
Fan
;
come
,
Sue
,
take
care
of
yourselves
;
keep
a
sharp
lookout
!
”
he
would
give
them
his
particular
attendance
.
Once
fairly
in
the
dockyard
,
he
began
to
reckon
upon
some
happy
intercourse
with
Fanny
,
as
they
were
very
soon
joined
by
a
brother
lounger
of
Mr
.
Price
’
s
,
who
was
come
to
take
his
daily
survey
of
how
things
went
on
,
and
who
must
prove
a
far
more
worthy
companion
than
himself
;
and
after
a
time
the
two
officers
seemed
very
well
satisfied
going
about
together
,
and
discussing
matters
of
equal
and
never
-
failing
interest
,
while
the
young
people
sat
down
upon
some
timbers
in
the
yard
,
or
found
a
seat
on
board
a
vessel
in
the
stocks
which
they
all
went
to
look
at
.
Fanny
was
most
conveniently
in
want
of
rest
.
Crawford
could
not
have
wished
her
more
fatigued
or
more
ready
to
sit
down
;
but
he
could
have
wished
her
sister
away
.
A
quick
-
looking
girl
of
Susan
’
s
age
was
the
very
worst
third
in
the
world
:
totally
different
from
Lady
Bertram
,
all
eyes
and
ears
;
and
there
was
no
introducing
the
main
point
before
her
.
He
must
content
himself
with
being
only
generally
agreeable
,
and
letting
Susan
have
her
share
of
entertainment
,
with
the
indulgence
,
now
and
then
,
of
a
look
or
hint
for
the
better
-
informed
and
conscious
Fanny
.
Norfolk
was
what
he
had
mostly
to
talk
of
:
there
he
had
been
some
time
,
and
everything
there
was
rising
in
importance
from
his
present
schemes
.
Such
a
man
could
come
from
no
place
,
no
society
,
without
importing
something
to
amuse
;
his
journeys
and
his
acquaintance
were
all
of
use
,
and
Susan
was
entertained
in
a
way
quite
new
to
her
.
For
Fanny
,
somewhat
more
was
related
than
the
accidental
agreeableness
of
the
parties
he
had
been
in
.
For
her
approbation
,
the
particular
reason
of
his
going
into
Norfolk
at
all
,
at
this
unusual
time
of
year
,
was
given
.
It
had
been
real
business
,
relative
to
the
renewal
of
a
lease
in
which
the
welfare
of
a
large
and
—
he
believed
—
industrious
family
was
at
stake
.
He
had
suspected
his
agent
of
some
underhand
dealing
;
of
meaning
to
bias
him
against
the
deserving
;
and
he
had
determined
to
go
himself
,
and
thoroughly
investigate
the
merits
of
the
case
.
He
had
gone
,
had
done
even
more
good
than
he
had
foreseen
,
had
been
useful
to
more
than
his
first
plan
had
comprehended
,
and
was
now
able
to
congratulate
himself
upon
it
,
and
to
feel
that
in
performing
a
duty
,
he
had
secured
agreeable
recollections
for
his
own
mind
.
He
had
introduced
himself
to
some
tenants
whom
he
had
never
seen
before
;
he
had
begun
making
acquaintance
with
cottages
whose
very
existence
,
though
on
his
own
estate
,
had
been
hitherto
unknown
to
him
.
This
was
aimed
,
and
well
aimed
,
at
Fanny
.
It
was
pleasing
to
hear
him
speak
so
properly
;
here
he
had
been
acting
as
he
ought
to
do
.
To
be
the
friend
of
the
poor
and
the
oppressed
!
Nothing
could
be
more
grateful
to
her
;
and
she
was
on
the
point
of
giving
him
an
approving
look
,
when
it
was
all
frightened
off
by
his
adding
a
something
too
pointed
of
his
hoping
soon
to
have
an
assistant
,
a
friend
,
a
guide
in
every
plan
of
utility
or
charity
for
Everingham
:
a
somebody
that
would
make
Everingham
and
all
about
it
a
dearer
object
than
it
had
ever
been
yet
.