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- Джейн Остен
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- Мэнсфилд Парк
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- Стр. 227/228
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After
what
had
passed
to
wound
and
alienate
the
two
families
,
the
continuance
of
the
Bertrams
and
Grants
in
such
close
neighbourhood
would
have
been
most
distressing
;
but
the
absence
of
the
latter
,
for
some
months
purposely
lengthened
,
ended
very
fortunately
in
the
necessity
,
or
at
least
the
practicability
,
of
a
permanent
removal
.
Dr
.
Grant
,
through
an
interest
on
which
he
had
almost
ceased
to
form
hopes
,
succeeded
to
a
stall
in
Westminster
,
which
,
as
affording
an
occasion
for
leaving
Mansfield
,
an
excuse
for
residence
in
London
,
and
an
increase
of
income
to
answer
the
expenses
of
the
change
,
was
highly
acceptable
to
those
who
went
and
those
who
staid
.
Mrs
.
Grant
,
with
a
temper
to
love
and
be
loved
,
must
have
gone
with
some
regret
from
the
scenes
and
people
she
had
been
used
to
;
but
the
same
happiness
of
disposition
must
in
any
place
,
and
any
society
,
secure
her
a
great
deal
to
enjoy
,
and
she
had
again
a
home
to
offer
Mary
;
and
Mary
had
had
enough
of
her
own
friends
,
enough
of
vanity
,
ambition
,
love
,
and
disappointment
in
the
course
of
the
last
half
-
year
,
to
be
in
need
of
the
true
kindness
of
her
sister
’
s
heart
,
and
the
rational
tranquillity
of
her
ways
.
They
lived
together
;
and
when
Dr
.
Grant
had
brought
on
apoplexy
and
death
,
by
three
great
institutionary
dinners
in
one
week
,
they
still
lived
together
;
for
Mary
,
though
perfectly
resolved
against
ever
attaching
herself
to
a
younger
brother
again
,
was
long
in
finding
among
the
dashing
representatives
,
or
idle
heir
-
apparents
,
who
were
at
the
command
of
her
beauty
,
and
her
£
20
,
000
,
any
one
who
could
satisfy
the
better
taste
she
had
acquired
at
Mansfield
,
whose
character
and
manners
could
authorise
a
hope
of
the
domestic
happiness
she
had
there
learned
to
estimate
,
or
put
Edmund
Bertram
sufficiently
out
of
her
head
.
Edmund
had
greatly
the
advantage
of
her
in
this
respect
.
He
had
not
to
wait
and
wish
with
vacant
affections
for
an
object
worthy
to
succeed
her
in
them
.
Scarcely
had
he
done
regretting
Mary
Crawford
,
and
observing
to
Fanny
how
impossible
it
was
that
he
should
ever
meet
with
such
another
woman
,
before
it
began
to
strike
him
whether
a
very
different
kind
of
woman
might
not
do
just
as
well
,
or
a
great
deal
better
:
whether
Fanny
herself
were
not
growing
as
dear
,
as
important
to
him
in
all
her
smiles
and
all
her
ways
,
as
Mary
Crawford
had
ever
been
;
and
whether
it
might
not
be
a
possible
,
an
hopeful
undertaking
to
persuade
her
that
her
warm
and
sisterly
regard
for
him
would
be
foundation
enough
for
wedded
love
.
I
purposely
abstain
from
dates
on
this
occasion
,
that
every
one
may
be
at
liberty
to
fix
their
own
,
aware
that
the
cure
of
unconquerable
passions
,
and
the
transfer
of
unchanging
attachments
,
must
vary
much
as
to
time
in
different
people
.
I
only
entreat
everybody
to
believe
that
exactly
at
the
time
when
it
was
quite
natural
that
it
should
be
so
,
and
not
a
week
earlier
,
Edmund
did
cease
to
care
about
Miss
Crawford
,
and
became
as
anxious
to
marry
Fanny
as
Fanny
herself
could
desire
.
With
such
a
regard
for
her
,
indeed
,
as
his
had
long
been
,
a
regard
founded
on
the
most
endearing
claims
of
innocence
and
helplessness
,
and
completed
by
every
recommendation
of
growing
worth
,
what
could
be
more
natural
than
the
change
?
Loving
,
guiding
,
protecting
her
,
as
he
had
been
doing
ever
since
her
being
ten
years
old
,
her
mind
in
so
great
a
degree
formed
by
his
care
,
and
her
comfort
depending
on
his
kindness
,
an
object
to
him
of
such
close
and
peculiar
interest
,
dearer
by
all
his
own
importance
with
her
than
any
one
else
at
Mansfield
,
what
was
there
now
to
add
,
but
that
he
should
learn
to
prefer
soft
light
eyes
to
sparkling
dark
ones
.
And
being
always
with
her
,
and
always
talking
confidentially
,
and
his
feelings
exactly
in
that
favourable
state
which
a
recent
disappointment
gives
,
those
soft
light
eyes
could
not
be
very
long
in
obtaining
the
pre
-
eminence
.
Having
once
set
out
,
and
felt
that
he
had
done
so
on
this
road
to
happiness
,
there
was
nothing
on
the
side
of
prudence
to
stop
him
or
make
his
progress
slow
;
no
doubts
of
her
deserving
,
no
fears
of
opposition
of
taste
,
no
need
of
drawing
new
hopes
of
happiness
from
dissimilarity
of
temper
.
Her
mind
,
disposition
,
opinions
,
and
habits
wanted
no
half
-
concealment
,
no
self
-
deception
on
the
present
,
no
reliance
on
future
improvement
.
Even
in
the
midst
of
his
late
infatuation
,
he
had
acknowledged
Fanny
’
s
mental
superiority
.
What
must
be
his
sense
of
it
now
,
therefore
?
She
was
of
course
only
too
good
for
him
;
but
as
nobody
minds
having
what
is
too
good
for
them
,
he
was
very
steadily
earnest
in
the
pursuit
of
the
blessing
,
and
it
was
not
possible
that
encouragement
from
her
should
be
long
wanting
.
Timid
,
anxious
,
doubting
as
she
was
,
it
was
still
impossible
that
such
tenderness
as
hers
should
not
,
at
times
,
hold
out
the
strongest
hope
of
success
,
though
it
remained
for
a
later
period
to
tell
him
the
whole
delightful
and
astonishing
truth
.
His
happiness
in
knowing
himself
to
have
been
so
long
the
beloved
of
such
a
heart
,
must
have
been
great
enough
to
warrant
any
strength
of
language
in
which
he
could
clothe
it
to
her
or
to
himself
;
it
must
have
been
a
delightful
happiness
.
But
there
was
happiness
elsewhere
which
no
description
can
reach
.
Let
no
one
presume
to
give
the
feelings
of
a
young
woman
on
receiving
the
assurance
of
that
affection
of
which
she
has
scarcely
allowed
herself
to
entertain
a
hope
.
Their
own
inclinations
ascertained
,
there
were
no
difficulties
behind
,
no
drawback
of
poverty
or
parent
.
It
was
a
match
which
Sir
Thomas
’
s
wishes
had
even
forestalled
.