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- Джейн Остен
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- Мэнсфилд Парк
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- Стр. 203/228
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She
turned
away
,
and
wished
he
would
not
say
such
things
.
She
was
willing
to
allow
he
might
have
more
good
qualities
than
she
had
been
wont
to
suppose
.
She
began
to
feel
the
possibility
of
his
turning
out
well
at
last
;
but
he
was
and
must
ever
be
completely
unsuited
to
her
,
and
ought
not
to
think
of
her
.
He
perceived
that
enough
had
been
said
of
Everingham
,
and
that
it
would
be
as
well
to
talk
of
something
else
,
and
turned
to
Mansfield
.
He
could
not
have
chosen
better
;
that
was
a
topic
to
bring
back
her
attention
and
her
looks
almost
instantly
.
It
was
a
real
indulgence
to
her
to
hear
or
to
speak
of
Mansfield
.
Now
so
long
divided
from
everybody
who
knew
the
place
,
she
felt
it
quite
the
voice
of
a
friend
when
he
mentioned
it
,
and
led
the
way
to
her
fond
exclamations
in
praise
of
its
beauties
and
comforts
,
and
by
his
honourable
tribute
to
its
inhabitants
allowed
her
to
gratify
her
own
heart
in
the
warmest
eulogium
,
in
speaking
of
her
uncle
as
all
that
was
clever
and
good
,
and
her
aunt
as
having
the
sweetest
of
all
sweet
tempers
.
He
had
a
great
attachment
to
Mansfield
himself
;
he
said
so
;
he
looked
forward
with
the
hope
of
spending
much
,
very
much
,
of
his
time
there
;
always
there
,
or
in
the
neighbourhood
.
He
particularly
built
upon
a
very
happy
summer
and
autumn
there
this
year
;
he
felt
that
it
would
be
so
:
he
depended
upon
it
;
a
summer
and
autumn
infinitely
superior
to
the
last
.
As
animated
,
as
diversified
,
as
social
,
but
with
circumstances
of
superiority
undescribable
.
“
Mansfield
,
Sotherton
,
Thornton
Lacey
,
”
he
continued
;
“
what
a
society
will
be
comprised
in
those
houses
!
And
at
Michaelmas
,
perhaps
,
a
fourth
may
be
added
:
some
small
hunting
-
box
in
the
vicinity
of
everything
so
dear
;
for
as
to
any
partnership
in
Thornton
Lacey
,
as
Edmund
Bertram
once
good
-
humouredly
proposed
,
I
hope
I
foresee
two
objections
:
two
fair
,
excellent
,
irresistible
objections
to
that
plan
.
”
Fanny
was
doubly
silenced
here
;
though
when
the
moment
was
passed
,
could
regret
that
she
had
not
forced
herself
into
the
acknowledged
comprehension
of
one
half
of
his
meaning
,
and
encouraged
him
to
say
something
more
of
his
sister
and
Edmund
.
It
was
a
subject
which
she
must
learn
to
speak
of
,
and
the
weakness
that
shrunk
from
it
would
soon
be
quite
unpardonable
.
When
Mr
.
Price
and
his
friend
had
seen
all
that
they
wished
,
or
had
time
for
,
the
others
were
ready
to
return
;
and
in
the
course
of
their
walk
back
,
Mr
.
Crawford
contrived
a
minute
’
s
privacy
for
telling
Fanny
that
his
only
business
in
Portsmouth
was
to
see
her
;
that
he
was
come
down
for
a
couple
of
days
on
her
account
,
and
hers
only
,
and
because
he
could
not
endure
a
longer
total
separation
.
She
was
sorry
,
really
sorry
;
and
yet
in
spite
of
this
and
the
two
or
three
other
things
which
she
wished
he
had
not
said
,
she
thought
him
altogether
improved
since
she
had
seen
him
;
he
was
much
more
gentle
,
obliging
,
and
attentive
to
other
people
’
s
feelings
than
he
had
ever
been
at
Mansfield
;
she
had
never
seen
him
so
agreeable
—
so
near
being
agreeable
;
his
behaviour
to
her
father
could
not
offend
,
and
there
was
something
particularly
kind
and
proper
in
the
notice
he
took
of
Susan
.
He
was
decidedly
improved
.
She
wished
the
next
day
over
,
she
wished
he
had
come
only
for
one
day
;
but
it
was
not
so
very
bad
as
she
would
have
expected
:
the
pleasure
of
talking
of
Mansfield
was
so
very
great
!
Before
they
parted
,
she
had
to
thank
him
for
another
pleasure
,
and
one
of
no
trivial
kind
.
Her
father
asked
him
to
do
them
the
honour
of
taking
his
mutton
with
them
,
and
Fanny
had
time
for
only
one
thrill
of
horror
,
before
he
declared
himself
prevented
by
a
prior
engagement
.
He
was
engaged
to
dinner
already
both
for
that
day
and
the
next
;
he
had
met
with
some
acquaintance
at
the
Crown
who
would
not
be
denied
;
he
should
have
the
honour
,
however
,
of
waiting
on
them
again
on
the
morrow
,
etc
.
,
and
so
they
parted
—
Fanny
in
a
state
of
actual
felicity
from
escaping
so
horrible
an
evil
!
To
have
had
him
join
their
family
dinner
-
party
,
and
see
all
their
deficiencies
,
would
have
been
dreadful
!
Rebecca
’
s
cookery
and
Rebecca
’
s
waiting
,
and
Betsey
’
s
eating
at
table
without
restraint
,
and
pulling
everything
about
as
she
chose
,
were
what
Fanny
herself
was
not
yet
enough
inured
to
for
her
often
to
make
a
tolerable
meal