Понятно
Понятно
Для того чтобы воспользоваться закладками, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Отмена
Для того чтобы воспользоваться озвучкой предложений, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Отмена
Озвучка предложений доступна при наличии PRO-доступа
Купить PRO-доступ
Отмена
321
Do
not
you
think
,
said
Fanny
,
after
a
little
consideration
,
that
this
impropriety
is
a
reflection
itself
upon
Mrs
.
Crawford
,
as
her
niece
has
been
entirely
brought
up
by
her
?
She
cannot
have
given
her
right
notions
of
what
was
due
to
the
Admiral
.
322
That
is
a
fair
remark
.
Yes
,
we
must
suppose
the
faults
of
the
niece
to
have
been
those
of
the
aunt
;
and
it
makes
one
more
sensible
of
the
disadvantages
she
has
been
under
.
But
I
think
her
present
home
must
do
her
good
.
Mrs
.
Grant
s
manners
are
just
what
they
ought
to
be
.
She
speaks
of
her
brother
with
a
very
pleasing
affection
.
323
Yes
,
except
as
to
his
writing
her
such
short
letters
.
She
made
me
almost
laugh
;
but
I
cannot
rate
so
very
highly
the
love
or
good
-
nature
of
a
brother
who
will
not
give
himself
the
trouble
of
writing
anything
worth
reading
to
his
sisters
,
when
they
are
separated
.
I
am
sure
William
would
never
have
used
me
so
,
under
any
circumstances
.
And
what
right
had
she
to
suppose
that
you
would
not
write
long
letters
when
you
were
absent
?
Отключить рекламу
324
The
right
of
a
lively
mind
,
Fanny
,
seizing
whatever
may
contribute
to
its
own
amusement
or
that
of
others
;
perfectly
allowable
,
when
untinctured
by
ill
-
humour
or
roughness
;
and
there
is
not
a
shadow
of
either
in
the
countenance
or
manner
of
Miss
Crawford
:
nothing
sharp
,
or
loud
,
or
coarse
.
She
is
perfectly
feminine
,
except
in
the
instances
we
have
been
speaking
of
.
There
she
cannot
be
justified
.
I
am
glad
you
saw
it
all
as
I
did
.
325
326
Having
formed
her
mind
and
gained
her
affections
,
he
had
a
good
chance
of
her
thinking
like
him
;
though
at
this
period
,
and
on
this
subject
,
there
began
now
to
be
some
danger
of
dissimilarity
,
for
he
was
in
a
line
of
admiration
of
Miss
Crawford
,
which
might
lead
him
where
Fanny
could
not
follow
.
Miss
Crawford
s
attractions
did
not
lessen
.
The
harp
arrived
,
and
rather
added
to
her
beauty
,
wit
,
and
good
-
humour
;
for
she
played
with
the
greatest
obligingness
,
with
an
expression
and
taste
which
were
peculiarly
becoming
,
and
there
was
something
clever
to
be
said
at
the
close
of
every
air
.
Edmund
was
at
the
Parsonage
every
day
,
to
be
indulged
with
his
favourite
instrument
:
one
morning
secured
an
invitation
for
the
next
;
for
the
lady
could
not
be
unwilling
to
have
a
listener
,
and
every
thing
was
soon
in
a
fair
train
.
327
A
young
woman
,
pretty
,
lively
,
with
a
harp
as
elegant
as
herself
,
and
both
placed
near
a
window
,
cut
down
to
the
ground
,
and
opening
on
a
little
lawn
,
surrounded
by
shrubs
in
the
rich
foliage
of
summer
,
was
enough
to
catch
any
man
s
heart
.
The
season
,
the
scene
,
the
air
,
were
all
favourable
to
tenderness
and
sentiment
.
Mrs
.
Grant
and
her
tambour
frame
were
not
without
their
use
:
it
was
all
in
harmony
;
and
as
everything
will
turn
to
account
when
love
is
once
set
going
,
even
the
sandwich
tray
,
and
Dr
.
Grant
doing
the
honours
of
it
,
were
worth
looking
at
.
Отключить рекламу
328
Without
studying
the
business
,
however
,
or
knowing
what
he
was
about
,
Edmund
was
beginning
,
at
the
end
of
a
week
of
such
intercourse
,
to
be
a
good
deal
in
love
;
and
to
the
credit
of
the
lady
it
may
be
added
that
,
without
his
being
a
man
of
the
world
or
an
elder
brother
,
without
any
of
the
arts
of
flattery
or
the
gaieties
of
small
talk
,
he
began
to
be
agreeable
to
her
.
She
felt
it
to
be
so
,
though
she
had
not
foreseen
,
and
could
hardly
understand
it
;
for
he
was
not
pleasant
by
any
common
rule
:
he
talked
no
nonsense
;
he
paid
no
compliments
;
his
opinions
were
unbending
,
his
attentions
tranquil
and
simple
.
There
was
a
charm
,
perhaps
,
in
his
sincerity
,
his
steadiness
,
his
integrity
,
which
Miss
Crawford
might
be
equal
to
feel
,
though
not
equal
to
discuss
with
herself
.
She
did
not
think
very
much
about
it
,
however
:
he
pleased
her
for
the
present
;
she
liked
to
have
him
near
her
;
it
was
enough
.
329
Fanny
could
not
wonder
that
Edmund
was
at
the
Parsonage
every
morning
;
she
would
gladly
have
been
there
too
,
might
she
have
gone
in
uninvited
and
unnoticed
,
to
hear
the
harp
;
neither
could
she
wonder
that
,
when
the
evening
stroll
was
over
,
and
the
two
families
parted
again
,
he
should
think
it
right
to
attend
Mrs
.
Grant
and
her
sister
to
their
home
,
while
Mr
.
Crawford
was
devoted
to
the
ladies
of
the
Park
;
but
she
thought
it
a
very
bad
exchange
;
and
if
Edmund
were
not
there
to
mix
the
wine
and
water
for
her
,
would
rather
go
without
it
than
not
.
330
She
was
a
little
surprised
that
he
could
spend
so
many
hours
with
Miss
Crawford
,
and
not
see
more
of
the
sort
of
fault
which
he
had
already
observed
,
and
of
which
she
was
almost
always
reminded
by
a
something
of
the
same
nature
whenever
she
was
in
her
company
;
but
so
it
was
.
Edmund
was
fond
of
speaking
to
her
of
Miss
Crawford
,
but
he
seemed
to
think
it
enough
that
the
Admiral
had
since
been
spared
;
and
she
scrupled
to
point
out
her
own
remarks
to
him
,
lest
it
should
appear
like
ill
-
nature
.
The
first
actual
pain
which
Miss
Crawford
occasioned
her
was
the
consequence
of
an
inclination
to
learn
to
ride
,
which
the
former
caught
,
soon
after
her
being
settled
at
Mansfield
,
from
the
example
of
the
young
ladies
at
the
Park
,
and
which
,
when
Edmund
s
acquaintance
with
her
increased
,
led
to
his
encouraging
the
wish
,
and
the
offer
of
his
own
quiet
mare
for
the
purpose
of
her
first
attempts
,
as
the
best
fitted
for
a
beginner
that
either
stable
could
furnish
.
No
pain
,
no
injury
,
however
,
was
designed
by
him
to
his
cousin
in
this
offer
:
she
was
not
to
lose
a
day
s
exercise
by
it
.
The
mare
was
only
to
be
taken
down
to
the
Parsonage
half
an
hour
before
her
ride
were
to
begin
;
and
Fanny
,
on
its
being
first
proposed
,
so
far
from
feeling
slighted
,
was
almost
over
-
powered
with
gratitude
that
he
should
be
asking
her
leave
for
it
.