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Catherine
had
no
leisure
for
speech
,
being
at
once
blushing
,
tying
her
gown
,
and
forming
wise
resolutions
with
the
most
violent
dispatch
.
Miss
Tilney
gently
hinted
her
fear
of
being
late
;
and
in
half
a
minute
they
ran
downstairs
together
,
in
an
alarm
not
wholly
unfounded
,
for
General
Tilney
was
pacing
the
drawing
-
room
,
his
watch
in
his
hand
,
and
having
,
on
the
very
instant
of
their
entering
,
pulled
the
bell
with
violence
,
ordered
“
Dinner
to
be
on
table
directly
!
”
Catherine
trembled
at
the
emphasis
with
which
he
spoke
,
and
sat
pale
and
breathless
,
in
a
most
humble
mood
,
concerned
for
his
children
,
and
detesting
old
chests
;
and
the
general
,
recovering
his
politeness
as
he
looked
at
her
,
spent
the
rest
of
his
time
in
scolding
his
daughter
for
so
foolishly
hurrying
her
fair
friend
,
who
was
absolutely
out
of
breath
from
haste
,
when
there
was
not
the
least
occasion
for
hurry
in
the
world
:
but
Catherine
could
not
at
all
get
over
the
double
distress
of
having
involved
her
friend
in
a
lecture
and
been
a
great
simpleton
herself
,
till
they
were
happily
seated
at
the
dinner
-
table
,
when
the
general
’
s
complacent
smiles
,
and
a
good
appetite
of
her
own
,
restored
her
to
peace
.
The
dining
-
parlour
was
a
noble
room
,
suitable
in
its
dimensions
to
a
much
larger
drawing
-
room
than
the
one
in
common
use
,
and
fitted
up
in
a
style
of
luxury
and
expense
which
was
almost
lost
on
the
unpractised
eye
of
Catherine
,
who
saw
little
more
than
its
spaciousness
and
the
number
of
their
attendants
.
Of
the
former
,
she
spoke
aloud
her
admiration
;
and
the
general
,
with
a
very
gracious
countenance
,
acknowledged
that
it
was
by
no
means
an
ill
-
sized
room
,
and
further
confessed
that
,
though
as
careless
on
such
subjects
as
most
people
,
he
did
look
upon
a
tolerably
large
eating
-
room
as
one
of
the
necessaries
of
life
;
he
supposed
,
however
,
“
that
she
must
have
been
used
to
much
better
-
sized
apartments
at
Mr
.
Allen
’
s
?
”
“
No
,
indeed
,
”
was
Catherine
’
s
honest
assurance
;
“
Mr
.
Allen
’
s
dining
-
parlour
was
not
more
than
half
as
large
,
”
and
she
had
never
seen
so
large
a
room
as
this
in
her
life
.
The
general
’
s
good
humour
increased
.
Why
,
as
he
had
such
rooms
,
he
thought
it
would
be
simple
not
to
make
use
of
them
;
but
,
upon
his
honour
,
he
believed
there
might
be
more
comfort
in
rooms
of
only
half
their
size
.
Mr
.
Allen
’
s
house
,
he
was
sure
,
must
be
exactly
of
the
true
size
for
rational
happiness
.
The
evening
passed
without
any
further
disturbance
,
and
,
in
the
occasional
absence
of
General
Tilney
,
with
much
positive
cheerfulness
.
It
was
only
in
his
presence
that
Catherine
felt
the
smallest
fatigue
from
her
journey
;
and
even
then
,
even
in
moments
of
languor
or
restraint
,
a
sense
of
general
happiness
preponderated
,
and
she
could
think
of
her
friends
in
Bath
without
one
wish
of
being
with
them
.
The
night
was
stormy
;
the
wind
had
been
rising
at
intervals
the
whole
afternoon
;
and
by
the
time
the
party
broke
up
,
it
blew
and
rained
violently
.
Catherine
,
as
she
crossed
the
hall
,
listened
to
the
tempest
with
sensations
of
awe
;
and
,
when
she
heard
it
rage
round
a
corner
of
the
ancient
building
and
close
with
sudden
fury
a
distant
door
,
felt
for
the
first
time
that
she
was
really
in
an
abbey
.
Yes
,
these
were
characteristic
sounds
;
they
brought
to
her
recollection
a
countless
variety
of
dreadful
situations
and
horrid
scenes
,
which
such
buildings
had
witnessed
,
and
such
storms
ushered
in
;
and
most
heartily
did
she
rejoice
in
the
happier
circumstances
attending
her
entrance
within
walls
so
solemn
!
She
had
nothing
to
dread
from
midnight
assassins
or
drunken
gallants
.
Henry
had
certainly
been
only
in
jest
in
what
he
had
told
her
that
morning
.
In
a
house
so
furnished
,
and
so
guarded
,
she
could
have
nothing
to
explore
or
to
suffer
,
and
might
go
to
her
bedroom
as
securely
as
if
it
had
been
her
own
chamber
at
Fullerton
.
Thus
wisely
fortifying
her
mind
,
as
she
proceeded
upstairs
,
she
was
enabled
,
especially
on
perceiving
that
Miss
Tilney
slept
only
two
doors
from
her
,
to
enter
her
room
with
a
tolerably
stout
heart
;
and
her
spirits
were
immediately
assisted
by
the
cheerful
blaze
of
a
wood
fire
.
“
How
much
better
is
this
,
”
said
she
,
as
she
walked
to
the
fender
—
“
how
much
better
to
find
a
fire
ready
lit
,
than
to
have
to
wait
shivering
in
the
cold
till
all
the
family
are
in
bed
,
as
so
many
poor
girls
have
been
obliged
to
do
,
and
then
to
have
a
faithful
old
servant
frightening
one
by
coming
in
with
a
faggot
!
How
glad
I
am
that
Northanger
is
what
it
is
!
If
it
had
been
like
some
other
places
,
I
do
not
know
that
,
in
such
a
night
as
this
,
I
could
have
answered
for
my
courage
:
but
now
,
to
be
sure
,
there
is
nothing
to
alarm
one
.
”
She
looked
round
the
room
.
The
window
curtains
seemed
in
motion
.
It
could
be
nothing
but
the
violence
of
the
wind
penetrating
through
the
divisions
of
the
shutters
;
and
she
stepped
boldly
forward
,
carelessly
humming
a
tune
,
to
assure
herself
of
its
being
so
,
peeped
courageously
behind
each
curtain
,
saw
nothing
on
either
low
window
seat
to
scare
her
,
and
on
placing
a
hand
against
the
shutter
,
felt
the
strongest
conviction
of
the
wind
’
s
force
.
A
glance
at
the
old
chest
,
as
she
turned
away
from
this
examination
,
was
not
without
its
use
;
she
scorned
the
causeless
fears
of
an
idle
fancy
,
and
began
with
a
most
happy
indifference
to
prepare
herself
for
bed
.
“
She
should
take
her
time
;
she
should
not
hurry
herself
;
she
did
not
care
if
she
were
the
last
person
up
in
the
house
.
But
she
would
not
make
up
her
fire
;
that
would
seem
cowardly
,
as
if
she
wished
for
the
protection
of
light
after
she
were
in
bed
.