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- Джейн Остен
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- Мэнсфилд Парк
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- Стр. 6/228
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“
But
,
cousin
,
will
it
go
to
the
post
?
”
“
Yes
,
depend
upon
me
it
shall
:
it
shall
go
with
the
other
letters
;
and
,
as
your
uncle
will
frank
it
,
it
will
cost
William
nothing
.
”
“
My
uncle
!
”
repeated
Fanny
,
with
a
frightened
look
.
“
Yes
,
when
you
have
written
the
letter
,
I
will
take
it
to
my
father
to
frank
.
”
Fanny
thought
it
a
bold
measure
,
but
offered
no
further
resistance
;
and
they
went
together
into
the
breakfast
-
room
,
where
Edmund
prepared
her
paper
,
and
ruled
her
lines
with
all
the
goodwill
that
her
brother
could
himself
have
felt
,
and
probably
with
somewhat
more
exactness
.
He
continued
with
her
the
whole
time
of
her
writing
,
to
assist
her
with
his
penknife
or
his
orthography
,
as
either
were
wanted
;
and
added
to
these
attentions
,
which
she
felt
very
much
,
a
kindness
to
her
brother
which
delighted
her
beyond
all
the
rest
.
He
wrote
with
his
own
hand
his
love
to
his
cousin
William
,
and
sent
him
half
a
guinea
under
the
seal
.
Fanny
’
s
feelings
on
the
occasion
were
such
as
she
believed
herself
incapable
of
expressing
;
but
her
countenance
and
a
few
artless
words
fully
conveyed
all
their
gratitude
and
delight
,
and
her
cousin
began
to
find
her
an
interesting
object
.
He
talked
to
her
more
,
and
,
from
all
that
she
said
,
was
convinced
of
her
having
an
affectionate
heart
,
and
a
strong
desire
of
doing
right
;
and
he
could
perceive
her
to
be
farther
entitled
to
attention
by
great
sensibility
of
her
situation
,
and
great
timidity
.
He
had
never
knowingly
given
her
pain
,
but
he
now
felt
that
she
required
more
positive
kindness
;
and
with
that
view
endeavoured
,
in
the
first
place
,
to
lessen
her
fears
of
them
all
,
and
gave
her
especially
a
great
deal
of
good
advice
as
to
playing
with
Maria
and
Julia
,
and
being
as
merry
as
possible
.
From
this
day
Fanny
grew
more
comfortable
.
She
felt
that
she
had
a
friend
,
and
the
kindness
of
her
cousin
Edmund
gave
her
better
spirits
with
everybody
else
.
The
place
became
less
strange
,
and
the
people
less
formidable
;
and
if
there
were
some
amongst
them
whom
she
could
not
cease
to
fear
,
she
began
at
least
to
know
their
ways
,
and
to
catch
the
best
manner
of
conforming
to
them
.
The
little
rusticities
and
awkwardnesses
which
had
at
first
made
grievous
inroads
on
the
tranquillity
of
all
,
and
not
least
of
herself
,
necessarily
wore
away
,
and
she
was
no
longer
materially
afraid
to
appear
before
her
uncle
,
nor
did
her
aunt
Norris
’
s
voice
make
her
start
very
much
.
To
her
cousins
she
became
occasionally
an
acceptable
companion
.
Though
unworthy
,
from
inferiority
of
age
and
strength
,
to
be
their
constant
associate
,
their
pleasures
and
schemes
were
sometimes
of
a
nature
to
make
a
third
very
useful
,
especially
when
that
third
was
of
an
obliging
,
yielding
temper
;
and
they
could
not
but
own
,
when
their
aunt
inquired
into
her
faults
,
or
their
brother
Edmund
urged
her
claims
to
their
kindness
,
that
“
Fanny
was
good
-
natured
enough
.
”
Edmund
was
uniformly
kind
himself
;
and
she
had
nothing
worse
to
endure
on
the
part
of
Tom
than
that
sort
of
merriment
which
a
young
man
of
seventeen
will
always
think
fair
with
a
child
of
ten
.
He
was
just
entering
into
life
,
full
of
spirits
,
and
with
all
the
liberal
dispositions
of
an
eldest
son
,
who
feels
born
only
for
expense
and
enjoyment
.
His
kindness
to
his
little
cousin
was
consistent
with
his
situation
and
rights
:
he
made
her
some
very
pretty
presents
,
and
laughed
at
her
.
As
her
appearance
and
spirits
improved
,
Sir
Thomas
and
Mrs
.
Norris
thought
with
greater
satisfaction
of
their
benevolent
plan
;
and
it
was
pretty
soon
decided
between
them
that
,
though
far
from
clever
,
she
showed
a
tractable
disposition
,
and
seemed
likely
to
give
them
little
trouble
.
A
mean
opinion
of
her
abilities
was
not
confined
to
them
.
Fanny
could
read
,
work
,
and
write
,
but
she
had
been
taught
nothing
more
;
and
as
her
cousins
found
her
ignorant
of
many
things
with
which
they
had
been
long
familiar
,
they
thought
her
prodigiously
stupid
,
and
for
the
first
two
or
three
weeks
were
continually
bringing
some
fresh
report
of
it
into
the
drawing
-
room
.