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441
Mrs
.
Rushworth
began
her
relation
.
This
chapel
was
fitted
up
as
you
see
it
,
in
James
the
Second
s
time
.
Before
that
period
,
as
I
understand
,
the
pews
were
only
wainscot
;
and
there
is
some
reason
to
think
that
the
linings
and
cushions
of
the
pulpit
and
family
seat
were
only
purple
cloth
;
but
this
is
not
quite
certain
.
It
is
a
handsome
chapel
,
and
was
formerly
in
constant
use
both
morning
and
evening
.
Prayers
were
always
read
in
it
by
the
domestic
chaplain
,
within
the
memory
of
many
;
but
the
late
Mr
.
Rushworth
left
it
off
.
442
443
Every
generation
has
its
improvements
,
said
Miss
Crawford
,
with
a
smile
,
to
Edmund
.
Отключить рекламу
444
Mrs
.
Rushworth
was
gone
to
repeat
her
lesson
to
Mr
.
Crawford
;
and
Edmund
,
Fanny
,
and
Miss
Crawford
remained
in
a
cluster
together
.
445
It
is
a
pity
,
cried
Fanny
,
that
the
custom
should
have
been
discontinued
.
It
was
a
valuable
part
of
former
times
.
There
is
something
in
a
chapel
and
chaplain
so
much
in
character
with
a
great
house
,
with
one
s
ideas
of
what
such
a
household
should
be
!
A
whole
family
assembling
regularly
for
the
purpose
of
prayer
is
fine
!
446
Very
fine
indeed
,
said
Miss
Crawford
,
laughing
.
It
must
do
the
heads
of
the
family
a
great
deal
of
good
to
force
all
the
poor
housemaids
and
footmen
to
leave
business
and
pleasure
,
and
say
their
prayers
here
twice
a
day
,
while
they
are
inventing
excuses
themselves
for
staying
away
.
447
That
is
hardly
Fanny
s
idea
of
a
family
assembling
,
said
Edmund
.
If
the
master
and
mistress
do
not
attend
themselves
,
there
must
be
more
harm
than
good
in
the
custom
.
Отключить рекламу
448
At
any
rate
,
it
is
safer
to
leave
people
to
their
own
devices
on
such
subjects
.
Everybody
likes
to
go
their
own
way
to
chuse
their
own
time
and
manner
of
devotion
.
449
The
obligation
of
attendance
,
the
formality
,
the
restraint
,
the
length
of
time
altogether
it
is
a
formidable
thing
,
and
what
nobody
likes
;
and
if
the
good
people
who
used
to
kneel
and
gape
in
that
gallery
could
have
foreseen
that
the
time
would
ever
come
when
men
and
women
might
lie
another
ten
minutes
in
bed
,
when
they
woke
with
a
headache
,
without
danger
of
reprobation
,
because
chapel
was
missed
,
they
would
have
jumped
with
joy
and
envy
.
Cannot
you
imagine
with
what
unwilling
feelings
the
former
belles
of
the
house
of
Rushworth
did
many
a
time
repair
to
this
chapel
?
The
young
Mrs
.
Eleanors
and
Mrs
.
Bridgets
starched
up
into
seeming
piety
,
but
with
heads
full
of
something
very
different
especially
if
the
poor
chaplain
were
not
worth
looking
at
and
,
in
those
days
,
I
fancy
parsons
were
very
inferior
even
to
what
they
are
now
.
450
For
a
few
moments
she
was
unanswered
.
Fanny
coloured
and
looked
at
Edmund
,
but
felt
too
angry
for
speech
;
and
he
needed
a
little
recollection
before
he
could
say
,
Your
lively
mind
can
hardly
be
serious
even
on
serious
subjects
.
You
have
given
us
an
amusing
sketch
,
and
human
nature
cannot
say
it
was
not
so
.
We
must
all
feel
at
times
the
difficulty
of
fixing
our
thoughts
as
we
could
wish
;
but
if
you
are
supposing
it
a
frequent
thing
,
that
is
to
say
,
a
weakness
grown
into
a
habit
from
neglect
,
what
could
be
expected
from
the
private
devotions
of
such
persons
?
Do
you
think
the
minds
which
are
suffered
,
which
are
indulged
in
wanderings
in
a
chapel
,
would
be
more
collected
in
a
closet
?