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Lady
Russell
had
little
taste
for
wit
,
and
of
anything
approaching
to
imprudence
a
horror
.
She
deprecated
the
connexion
in
every
light
.
Such
opposition
,
as
these
feelings
produced
,
was
more
than
Anne
could
combat
.
Young
and
gentle
as
she
was
,
it
might
yet
have
been
possible
to
withstand
her
father
's
ill-will
,
though
unsoftened
by
one
kind
word
or
look
on
the
part
of
her
sister
;
but
Lady
Russell
,
whom
she
had
always
loved
and
relied
on
,
could
not
,
with
such
steadiness
of
opinion
,
and
such
tenderness
of
manner
,
be
continually
advising
her
in
vain
.
She
was
persuaded
to
believe
the
engagement
a
wrong
thing
:
indiscreet
,
improper
,
hardly
capable
of
success
,
and
not
deserving
it
.
But
it
was
not
a
merely
selfish
caution
,
under
which
she
acted
,
in
putting
an
end
to
it
.
Had
she
not
imagined
herself
consulting
his
good
,
even
more
than
her
own
,
she
could
hardly
have
given
him
up
.
The
belief
of
being
prudent
,
and
self-denying
,
principally
for
his
advantage
,
was
her
chief
consolation
,
under
the
misery
of
a
parting
,
a
final
parting
;
and
every
consolation
was
required
,
for
she
had
to
encounter
all
the
additional
pain
of
opinions
,
on
his
side
,
totally
unconvinced
and
unbending
,
and
of
his
feeling
himself
ill
used
by
so
forced
a
relinquishment
.
He
had
left
the
country
in
consequence
.
A
few
months
had
seen
the
beginning
and
the
end
of
their
acquaintance
;
but
not
with
a
few
months
ended
Anne
's
share
of
suffering
from
it
.
Her
attachment
and
regrets
had
,
for
a
long
time
,
clouded
every
enjoyment
of
youth
,
and
an
early
loss
of
bloom
and
spirits
had
been
their
lasting
effect
.
More
than
seven
years
were
gone
since
this
little
history
of
sorrowful
interest
had
reached
its
close
;
and
time
had
softened
down
much
,
perhaps
nearly
all
of
peculiar
attachment
to
him
,
but
she
had
been
too
dependent
on
time
alone
;
no
aid
had
been
given
in
change
of
place
(
except
in
one
visit
to
Bath
soon
after
the
rupture
)
,
or
in
any
novelty
or
enlargement
of
society
.
No
one
had
ever
come
within
the
Kellynch
circle
,
who
could
bear
a
comparison
with
Frederick
Wentworth
,
as
he
stood
in
her
memory
.
No
second
attachment
,
the
only
thoroughly
natural
,
happy
,
and
sufficient
cure
,
at
her
time
of
life
,
had
been
possible
to
the
nice
tone
of
her
mind
,
the
fastidiousness
of
her
taste
,
in
the
small
limits
of
the
society
around
them
.
She
had
been
solicited
,
when
about
two-and-twenty
,
to
change
her
name
,
by
the
young
man
,
who
not
long
afterwards
found
a
more
willing
mind
in
her
younger
sister
;
and
Lady
Russell
had
lamented
her
refusal
;
for
Charles
Musgrove
was
the
eldest
son
of
a
man
,
whose
landed
property
and
general
importance
were
second
in
that
country
,
only
to
Sir
Walter
's
,
and
of
good
character
and
appearance
;
and
however
Lady
Russell
might
have
asked
yet
for
something
more
,
while
Anne
was
nineteen
,
she
would
have
rejoiced
to
see
her
at
twenty-two
so
respectably
removed
from
the
partialities
and
injustice
of
her
father
's
house
,
and
settled
so
permanently
near
herself
.
But
in
this
case
,
Anne
had
left
nothing
for
advice
to
do
;
and
though
Lady
Russell
,
as
satisfied
as
ever
with
her
own
discretion
,
never
wished
the
past
undone
,
she
began
now
to
have
the
anxiety
which
borders
on
hopelessness
for
Anne
's
being
tempted
,
by
some
man
of
talents
and
independence
,
to
enter
a
state
for
which
she
held
her
to
be
peculiarly
fitted
by
her
warm
affections
and
domestic
habits
.
They
knew
not
each
other
's
opinion
,
either
its
constancy
or
its
change
,
on
the
one
leading
point
of
Anne
's
conduct
,
for
the
subject
was
never
alluded
to
;
but
Anne
,
at
seven-and-twenty
,
thought
very
differently
from
what
she
had
been
made
to
think
at
nineteen
.
She
did
not
blame
Lady
Russell
,
she
did
not
blame
herself
for
having
been
guided
by
her
;
but
she
felt
that
were
any
young
person
,
in
similar
circumstances
,
to
apply
to
her
for
counsel
,
they
would
never
receive
any
of
such
certain
immediate
wretchedness
,
such
uncertain
future
good
.
She
was
persuaded
that
under
every
disadvantage
of
disapprobation
at
home
,
and
every
anxiety
attending
his
profession
,
all
their
probable
fears
,
delays
,
and
disappointments
,
she
should
yet
have
been
a
happier
woman
in
maintaining
the
engagement
,
than
she
had
been
in
the
sacrifice
of
it
;
and
this
,
she
fully
believed
,
had
the
usual
share
,
had
even
more
than
the
usual
share
of
all
such
solicitudes
and
suspense
been
theirs
,
without
reference
to
the
actual
results
of
their
case
,
which
,
as
it
happened
,
would
have
bestowed
earlier
prosperity
than
could
be
reasonably
calculated
on
.
All
his
sanguine
expectations
,
all
his
confidence
had
been
justified
.
His
genius
and
ardour
had
seemed
to
foresee
and
to
command
his
prosperous
path
.
He
had
,
very
soon
after
their
engagement
ceased
,
got
employ
:
and
all
that
he
had
told
her
would
follow
,
had
taken
place
.
He
had
distinguished
himself
,
and
early
gained
the
other
step
in
rank
,
and
must
now
,
by
successive
captures
,
have
made
a
handsome
fortune
.
She
had
only
navy
lists
and
newspapers
for
her
authority
,
but
she
could
not
doubt
his
being
rich
;
and
,
in
favour
of
his
constancy
,
she
had
no
reason
to
believe
him
married
.
How
eloquent
could
Anne
Elliot
have
been
!
how
eloquent
,
at
least
,
were
her
wishes
on
the
side
of
early
warm
attachment
,
and
a
cheerful
confidence
in
futurity
,
against
that
over-anxious
caution
which
seems
to
insult
exertion
and
distrust
Providence
!
She
had
been
forced
into
prudence
in
her
youth
,
she
learned
romance
as
she
grew
older
:
the
natural
sequel
of
an
unnatural
beginning
.
With
all
these
circumstances
,
recollections
and
feelings
,
she
could
not
hear
that
Captain
Wentworth
's
sister
was
likely
to
live
at
Kellynch
without
a
revival
of
former
pain
;
and
many
a
stroll
,
and
many
a
sigh
,
were
necessary
to
dispel
the
agitation
of
the
idea
.
She
often
told
herself
it
was
folly
,
before
she
could
harden
her
nerves
sufficiently
to
feel
the
continual
discussion
of
the
Crofts
and
their
business
no
evil
.
She
was
assisted
,
however
,
by
that
perfect
indifference
and
apparent
unconsciousness
,
among
the
only
three
of
her
own
friends
in
the
secret
of
the
past
,
which
seemed
almost
to
deny
any
recollection
of
it
She
could
do
justice
to
the
superiority
of
Lady
Russell
's
motives
in
this
,
over
those
of
her
father
and
Elizabeth
;
she
could
honour
all
the
better
feelings
of
her
calmness
;
but
the
general
air
of
oblivion
among
them
was
highly
important
from
whatever
it
sprung
;
and
in
the
event
of
Admiral
Croft
's
really
taking
Kellynch
Hall
,
she
rejoiced
anew
over
the
conviction
which
had
always
been
most
grateful
to
her
,
of
the
past
being
known
to
those
three
only
among
her
connexions
,
by
whom
no
syllable
,
she
believed
,
would
ever
be
whispered
,
and
in
the
trust
that
among
his
,
the
brother
only
with
whom
he
had
been
residing
,
had
received
any
information
of
their
short-lived
engagement
.
That
brother
had
been
long
removed
from
the
country
and
being
a
sensible
man
,
and
,
moreover
,
a
single
man
at
the
time
,
she
had
a
fond
dependence
on
no
human
creature
's
having
heard
of
it
from
him
.