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- Джейн Остен
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- Мэнсфилд Парк
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- Стр. 220/228
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Her
affections
were
not
acute
,
nor
was
her
mind
tenacious
.
After
a
time
,
Fanny
found
it
not
impossible
to
direct
her
thoughts
to
other
subjects
,
and
revive
some
interest
in
the
usual
occupations
;
but
whenever
Lady
Bertram
was
fixed
on
the
event
,
she
could
see
it
only
in
one
light
,
as
comprehending
the
loss
of
a
daughter
,
and
a
disgrace
never
to
be
wiped
off
.
Fanny
learnt
from
her
all
the
particulars
which
had
yet
transpired
.
Her
aunt
was
no
very
methodical
narrator
,
but
with
the
help
of
some
letters
to
and
from
Sir
Thomas
,
and
what
she
already
knew
herself
,
and
could
reasonably
combine
,
she
was
soon
able
to
understand
quite
as
much
as
she
wished
of
the
circumstances
attending
the
story
.
Mrs
.
Rushworth
had
gone
,
for
the
Easter
holidays
,
to
Twickenham
,
with
a
family
whom
she
had
just
grown
intimate
with
:
a
family
of
lively
,
agreeable
manners
,
and
probably
of
morals
and
discretion
to
suit
,
for
to
their
house
Mr
.
Crawford
had
constant
access
at
all
times
.
His
having
been
in
the
same
neighbourhood
Fanny
already
knew
.
Mr
.
Rushworth
had
been
gone
at
this
time
to
Bath
,
to
pass
a
few
days
with
his
mother
,
and
bring
her
back
to
town
,
and
Maria
was
with
these
friends
without
any
restraint
,
without
even
Julia
;
for
Julia
had
removed
from
Wimpole
Street
two
or
three
weeks
before
,
on
a
visit
to
some
relations
of
Sir
Thomas
;
a
removal
which
her
father
and
mother
were
now
disposed
to
attribute
to
some
view
of
convenience
on
Mr
.
Yates
’
s
account
.
Very
soon
after
the
Rushworths
’
return
to
Wimpole
Street
,
Sir
Thomas
had
received
a
letter
from
an
old
and
most
particular
friend
in
London
,
who
hearing
and
witnessing
a
good
deal
to
alarm
him
in
that
quarter
,
wrote
to
recommend
Sir
Thomas
’
s
coming
to
London
himself
,
and
using
his
influence
with
his
daughter
to
put
an
end
to
the
intimacy
which
was
already
exposing
her
to
unpleasant
remarks
,
and
evidently
making
Mr
.
Rushworth
uneasy
.
Sir
Thomas
was
preparing
to
act
upon
this
letter
,
without
communicating
its
contents
to
any
creature
at
Mansfield
,
when
it
was
followed
by
another
,
sent
express
from
the
same
friend
,
to
break
to
him
the
almost
desperate
situation
in
which
affairs
then
stood
with
the
young
people
.
Mrs
.
Rushworth
had
left
her
husband
’
s
house
:
Mr
.
Rushworth
had
been
in
great
anger
and
distress
to
him
(
Mr
.
Harding
)
for
his
advice
;
Mr
.
Harding
feared
there
had
been
at
least
very
flagrant
indiscretion
.
The
maidservant
of
Mrs
.
Rushworth
,
senior
,
threatened
alarmingly
.
He
was
doing
all
in
his
power
to
quiet
everything
,
with
the
hope
of
Mrs
.
Rushworth
’
s
return
,
but
was
so
much
counteracted
in
Wimpole
Street
by
the
influence
of
Mr
.
Rushworth
’
s
mother
,
that
the
worst
consequences
might
be
apprehended
.
This
dreadful
communication
could
not
be
kept
from
the
rest
of
the
family
.
Sir
Thomas
set
off
,
Edmund
would
go
with
him
,
and
the
others
had
been
left
in
a
state
of
wretchedness
,
inferior
only
to
what
followed
the
receipt
of
the
next
letters
from
London
.
Everything
was
by
that
time
public
beyond
a
hope
.
The
servant
of
Mrs
.
Rushworth
,
the
mother
,
had
exposure
in
her
power
,
and
supported
by
her
mistress
,
was
not
to
be
silenced
.
The
two
ladies
,
even
in
the
short
time
they
had
been
together
,
had
disagreed
;
and
the
bitterness
of
the
elder
against
her
daughter
-
in
-
law
might
perhaps
arise
almost
as
much
from
the
personal
disrespect
with
which
she
had
herself
been
treated
as
from
sensibility
for
her
son
.
However
that
might
be
,
she
was
unmanageable
.
But
had
she
been
less
obstinate
,
or
of
less
weight
with
her
son
,
who
was
always
guided
by
the
last
speaker
,
by
the
person
who
could
get
hold
of
and
shut
him
up
,
the
case
would
still
have
been
hopeless
,
for
Mrs
.
Rushworth
did
not
appear
again
,
and
there
was
every
reason
to
conclude
her
to
be
concealed
somewhere
with
Mr
.
Crawford
,
who
had
quitted
his
uncle
’
s
house
,
as
for
a
journey
,
on
the
very
day
of
her
absenting
herself
.
Sir
Thomas
,
however
,
remained
yet
a
little
longer
in
town
,
in
the
hope
of
discovering
and
snatching
her
from
farther
vice
,
though
all
was
lost
on
the
side
of
character
.
His
present
state
Fanny
could
hardly
bear
to
think
of
.
There
was
but
one
of
his
children
who
was
not
at
this
time
a
source
of
misery
to
him
.