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Bitterly
did
he
deplore
a
deficiency
which
now
he
could
scarcely
comprehend
to
have
been
possible
.
Wretchedly
did
he
feel
,
that
with
all
the
cost
and
care
of
an
anxious
and
expensive
education
,
he
had
brought
up
his
daughters
without
their
understanding
their
first
duties
,
or
his
being
acquainted
with
their
character
and
temper
.
The
high
spirit
and
strong
passions
of
Mrs
.
Rushworth
,
especially
,
were
made
known
to
him
only
in
their
sad
result
.
She
was
not
to
be
prevailed
on
to
leave
Mr
.
Crawford
.
She
hoped
to
marry
him
,
and
they
continued
together
till
she
was
obliged
to
be
convinced
that
such
hope
was
vain
,
and
till
the
disappointment
and
wretchedness
arising
from
the
conviction
rendered
her
temper
so
bad
,
and
her
feelings
for
him
so
like
hatred
,
as
to
make
them
for
a
while
each
other
s
punishment
,
and
then
induce
a
voluntary
separation
.
She
had
lived
with
him
to
be
reproached
as
the
ruin
of
all
his
happiness
in
Fanny
,
and
carried
away
no
better
consolation
in
leaving
him
than
that
she
had
divided
them
.
What
can
exceed
the
misery
of
such
a
mind
in
such
a
situation
?
Отключить рекламу
Mr
.
Rushworth
had
no
difficulty
in
procuring
a
divorce
;
and
so
ended
a
marriage
contracted
under
such
circumstances
as
to
make
any
better
end
the
effect
of
good
luck
not
to
be
reckoned
on
.
She
had
despised
him
,
and
loved
another
;
and
he
had
been
very
much
aware
that
it
was
so
.
The
indignities
of
stupidity
,
and
the
disappointments
of
selfish
passion
,
can
excite
little
pity
.
His
punishment
followed
his
conduct
,
as
did
a
deeper
punishment
the
deeper
guilt
of
his
wife
.
He
was
released
from
the
engagement
to
be
mortified
and
unhappy
,
till
some
other
pretty
girl
could
attract
him
into
matrimony
again
,
and
he
might
set
forward
on
a
second
,
and
,
it
is
to
be
hoped
,
more
prosperous
trial
of
the
state
:
if
duped
,
to
be
duped
at
least
with
good
humour
and
good
luck
;
while
she
must
withdraw
with
infinitely
stronger
feelings
to
a
retirement
and
reproach
which
could
allow
no
second
spring
of
hope
or
character
.
Where
she
could
be
placed
became
a
subject
of
most
melancholy
and
momentous
consultation
.
Mrs
.
Norris
,
whose
attachment
seemed
to
augment
with
the
demerits
of
her
niece
,
would
have
had
her
received
at
home
and
countenanced
by
them
all
.
Sir
Thomas
would
not
hear
of
it
;
and
Mrs
.
Norris
s
anger
against
Fanny
was
so
much
the
greater
,
from
considering
her
residence
there
as
the
motive
.
She
persisted
in
placing
his
scruples
to
her
account
,
though
Sir
Thomas
very
solemnly
assured
her
that
,
had
there
been
no
young
woman
in
question
,
had
there
been
no
young
person
of
either
sex
belonging
to
him
,
to
be
endangered
by
the
society
or
hurt
by
the
character
of
Mrs
.
Rushworth
,
he
would
never
have
offered
so
great
an
insult
to
the
neighbourhood
as
to
expect
it
to
notice
her
.
As
a
daughter
,
he
hoped
a
penitent
one
,
she
should
be
protected
by
him
,
and
secured
in
every
comfort
,
and
supported
by
every
encouragement
to
do
right
,
which
their
relative
situations
admitted
;
but
farther
than
that
he
could
not
go
.
Maria
had
destroyed
her
own
character
,
and
he
would
not
,
by
a
vain
attempt
to
restore
what
never
could
be
restored
,
by
affording
his
sanction
to
vice
,
or
in
seeking
to
lessen
its
disgrace
,
be
anywise
accessory
to
introducing
such
misery
in
another
man
s
family
as
he
had
known
himself
.
Отключить рекламу
It
ended
in
Mrs
.
Norris
s
resolving
to
quit
Mansfield
and
devote
herself
to
her
unfortunate
Maria
,
and
in
an
establishment
being
formed
for
them
in
another
country
,
remote
and
private
,
where
,
shut
up
together
with
little
society
,
on
one
side
no
affection
,
on
the
other
no
judgment
,
it
may
be
reasonably
supposed
that
their
tempers
became
their
mutual
punishment
.
Mrs
.
Norris
s
removal
from
Mansfield
was
the
great
supplementary
comfort
of
Sir
Thomas
s
life
.
His
opinion
of
her
had
been
sinking
from
the
day
of
his
return
from
Antigua
:
in
every
transaction
together
from
that
period
,
in
their
daily
intercourse
,
in
business
,
or
in
chat
,
she
had
been
regularly
losing
ground
in
his
esteem
,
and
convincing
him
that
either
time
had
done
her
much
disservice
,
or
that
he
had
considerably
over
-
rated
her
sense
,
and
wonderfully
borne
with
her
manners
before
.
He
had
felt
her
as
an
hourly
evil
,
which
was
so
much
the
worse
,
as
there
seemed
no
chance
of
its
ceasing
but
with
life
;
she
seemed
a
part
of
himself
that
must
be
borne
for
ever
.
To
be
relieved
from
her
,
therefore
,
was
so
great
a
felicity
that
,
had
she
not
left
bitter
remembrances
behind
her
,
there
might
have
been
danger
of
his
learning
almost
to
approve
the
evil
which
produced
such
a
good
.
She
was
regretted
by
no
one
at
Mansfield
.