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I
never
will
,
no
,
I
certainly
never
will
wish
for
a
letter
again
,
was
Fanny
s
secret
declaration
as
she
finished
this
.
What
do
they
bring
but
disappointment
and
sorrow
?
Not
till
after
Easter
!
How
shall
I
bear
it
?
And
my
poor
aunt
talking
of
me
every
hour
!
Fanny
checked
the
tendency
of
these
thoughts
as
well
as
she
could
,
but
she
was
within
half
a
minute
of
starting
the
idea
that
Sir
Thomas
was
quite
unkind
,
both
to
her
aunt
and
to
herself
.
As
for
the
main
subject
of
the
letter
,
there
was
nothing
in
that
to
soothe
irritation
.
She
was
almost
vexed
into
displeasure
and
anger
against
Edmund
.
There
is
no
good
in
this
delay
,
said
she
.
Why
is
not
it
settled
?
He
is
blinded
,
and
nothing
will
open
his
eyes
;
nothing
can
,
after
having
had
truths
before
him
so
long
in
vain
.
He
will
marry
her
,
and
be
poor
and
miserable
.
God
grant
that
her
influence
do
not
make
him
cease
to
be
respectable
!
She
looked
over
the
letter
again
.
So
very
fond
of
me
!
tis
nonsense
all
.
She
loves
nobody
but
herself
and
her
brother
.
Her
friends
leading
her
astray
for
years
!
She
is
quite
as
likely
to
have
led
them
astray
.
They
have
all
,
perhaps
,
been
corrupting
one
another
;
but
if
they
are
so
much
fonder
of
her
than
she
is
of
them
,
she
is
the
less
likely
to
have
been
hurt
,
except
by
their
flattery
.
The
only
woman
in
the
world
whom
he
could
ever
think
of
as
a
wife
.
I
firmly
believe
it
.
It
is
an
attachment
to
govern
his
whole
life
.
Accepted
or
refused
,
his
heart
is
wedded
to
her
for
ever
.
The
loss
of
Mary
I
must
consider
as
comprehending
the
loss
of
Crawford
and
Fanny
.
Edmund
,
you
do
not
know
me
.
The
families
would
never
be
connected
if
you
did
not
connect
them
!
Oh
!
write
,
write
.
Finish
it
at
once
.
Let
there
be
an
end
of
this
suspense
.
Fix
,
commit
,
condemn
yourself
.
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Such
sensations
,
however
,
were
too
near
akin
to
resentment
to
be
long
guiding
Fanny
s
soliloquies
.
She
was
soon
more
softened
and
sorrowful
.
His
warm
regard
,
his
kind
expressions
,
his
confidential
treatment
,
touched
her
strongly
.
He
was
only
too
good
to
everybody
.
It
was
a
letter
,
in
short
,
which
she
would
not
but
have
had
for
the
world
,
and
which
could
never
be
valued
enough
.
This
was
the
end
of
it
.
Everybody
at
all
addicted
to
letter
-
writing
,
without
having
much
to
say
,
which
will
include
a
large
proportion
of
the
female
world
at
least
,
must
feel
with
Lady
Bertram
that
she
was
out
of
luck
in
having
such
a
capital
piece
of
Mansfield
news
as
the
certainty
of
the
Grants
going
to
Bath
,
occur
at
a
time
when
she
could
make
no
advantage
of
it
,
and
will
admit
that
it
must
have
been
very
mortifying
to
her
to
see
it
fall
to
the
share
of
her
thankless
son
,
and
treated
as
concisely
as
possible
at
the
end
of
a
long
letter
,
instead
of
having
it
to
spread
over
the
largest
part
of
a
page
of
her
own
.
For
though
Lady
Bertram
rather
shone
in
the
epistolary
line
,
having
early
in
her
marriage
,
from
the
want
of
other
employment
,
and
the
circumstance
of
Sir
Thomas
s
being
in
Parliament
,
got
into
the
way
of
making
and
keeping
correspondents
,
and
formed
for
herself
a
very
creditable
,
common
-
place
,
amplifying
style
,
so
that
a
very
little
matter
was
enough
for
her
:
she
could
not
do
entirely
without
any
;
she
must
have
something
to
write
about
,
even
to
her
niece
;
and
being
so
soon
to
lose
all
the
benefit
of
Dr
.
Grant
s
gouty
symptoms
and
Mrs
.
Grant
s
morning
calls
,
it
was
very
hard
upon
her
to
be
deprived
of
one
of
the
last
epistolary
uses
she
could
put
them
to
.
There
was
a
rich
amends
,
however
,
preparing
for
her
.
Lady
Bertram
s
hour
of
good
luck
came
.
Within
a
few
days
from
the
receipt
of
Edmund
s
letter
,
Fanny
had
one
from
her
aunt
,
beginning
thus
My
Dear
Fanny
,
I
take
up
my
pen
to
communicate
some
very
alarming
intelligence
,
which
I
make
no
doubt
will
give
you
much
concern
.
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This
was
a
great
deal
better
than
to
have
to
take
up
the
pen
to
acquaint
her
with
all
the
particulars
of
the
Grants
intended
journey
,
for
the
present
intelligence
was
of
a
nature
to
promise
occupation
for
the
pen
for
many
days
to
come
,
being
no
less
than
the
dangerous
illness
of
her
eldest
son
,
of
which
they
had
received
notice
by
express
a
few
hours
before
.
Tom
had
gone
from
London
with
a
party
of
young
men
to
Newmarket
,
where
a
neglected
fall
and
a
good
deal
of
drinking
had
brought
on
a
fever
;
and
when
the
party
broke
up
,
being
unable
to
move
,
had
been
left
by
himself
at
the
house
of
one
of
these
young
men
to
the
comforts
of
sickness
and
solitude
,
and
the
attendance
only
of
servants
.
Instead
of
being
soon
well
enough
to
follow
his
friends
,
as
he
had
then
hoped
,
his
disorder
increased
considerably
,
and
it
was
not
long
before
he
thought
so
ill
of
himself
as
to
be
as
ready
as
his
physician
to
have
a
letter
despatched
to
Mansfield
.
This
distressing
intelligence
,
as
you
may
suppose
,
observed
her
ladyship
,
after
giving
the
substance
of
it
,
has
agitated
us
exceedingly
,
and
we
cannot
prevent
ourselves
from
being
greatly
alarmed
and
apprehensive
for
the
poor
invalid
,
whose
state
Sir
Thomas
fears
may
be
very
critical
;
and
Edmund
kindly
proposes
attending
his
brother
immediately
,
but
I
am
happy
to
add
that
Sir
Thomas
will
not
leave
me
on
this
distressing
occasion
,
as
it
would
be
too
trying
for
me
.