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611
But
the
motives
of
a
man
who
takes
orders
with
the
certainty
of
preferment
may
be
fairly
suspected
,
you
think
?
said
Edmund
.
To
be
justified
in
your
eyes
,
he
must
do
it
in
the
most
complete
uncertainty
of
any
provision
.
612
What
!
take
orders
without
a
living
!
No
;
that
is
madness
indeed
;
absolute
madness
.
613
Shall
I
ask
you
how
the
church
is
to
be
filled
,
if
a
man
is
neither
to
take
orders
with
a
living
nor
without
?
No
;
for
you
certainly
would
not
know
what
to
say
.
But
I
must
beg
some
advantage
to
the
clergyman
from
your
own
argument
.
As
he
cannot
be
influenced
by
those
feelings
which
you
rank
highly
as
temptation
and
reward
to
the
soldier
and
sailor
in
their
choice
of
a
profession
,
as
heroism
,
and
noise
,
and
fashion
,
are
all
against
him
,
he
ought
to
be
less
liable
to
the
suspicion
of
wanting
sincerity
or
good
intentions
in
the
choice
of
his
.
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614
Oh
!
no
doubt
he
is
very
sincere
in
preferring
an
income
ready
made
,
to
the
trouble
of
working
for
one
;
and
has
the
best
intentions
of
doing
nothing
all
the
rest
of
his
days
but
eat
,
drink
,
and
grow
fat
.
It
is
indolence
,
Mr
.
Bertram
,
indeed
.
615
Indolence
and
love
of
ease
;
a
want
of
all
laudable
ambition
,
of
taste
for
good
company
,
or
of
inclination
to
take
the
trouble
of
being
agreeable
,
which
make
men
clergymen
.
A
clergyman
has
nothing
to
do
but
be
slovenly
and
selfish
read
the
newspaper
,
watch
the
weather
,
and
quarrel
with
his
wife
.
His
curate
does
all
the
work
,
and
the
business
of
his
own
life
is
to
dine
.
616
There
are
such
clergymen
,
no
doubt
,
but
I
think
they
are
not
so
common
as
to
justify
Miss
Crawford
in
esteeming
it
their
general
character
.
I
suspect
that
in
this
comprehensive
and
(
may
I
say
)
commonplace
censure
,
you
are
not
judging
from
yourself
,
but
from
prejudiced
persons
,
whose
opinions
you
have
been
in
the
habit
of
hearing
.
It
is
impossible
that
your
own
observation
can
have
given
you
much
knowledge
of
the
clergy
.
You
can
have
been
personally
acquainted
with
very
few
of
a
set
of
men
you
condemn
so
conclusively
.
You
are
speaking
what
you
have
been
told
at
your
uncle
s
table
.
617
I
speak
what
appears
to
me
the
general
opinion
;
and
where
an
opinion
is
general
,
it
is
usually
correct
.
Though
I
have
not
seen
much
of
the
domestic
lives
of
clergymen
,
it
is
seen
by
too
many
to
leave
any
deficiency
of
information
.
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618
Where
any
one
body
of
educated
men
,
of
whatever
denomination
,
are
condemned
indiscriminately
,
there
must
be
a
deficiency
of
information
,
or
(
smiling
)
of
something
else
.
Your
uncle
,
and
his
brother
admirals
,
perhaps
knew
little
of
clergymen
beyond
the
chaplains
whom
,
good
or
bad
,
they
were
always
wishing
away
.
619
620
Poor
William
!
He
has
met
with
great
kindness
from
the
chaplain
of
the
Antwerp
,
was
a
tender
apostrophe
of
Fanny
s
,
very
much
to
the
purpose
of
her
own
feelings
if
not
of
the
conversation
.