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"
Are
you
going
as
high
as
Belmont
?
Are
you
going
near
Camden
Place
?
Because
,
if
you
are
,
I
shall
have
no
scruple
in
asking
you
to
take
my
place
,
and
give
Anne
your
arm
to
her
father
's
door
.
She
is
rather
done
for
this
morning
,
and
must
not
go
so
far
without
help
,
and
I
ought
to
be
at
that
fellow
's
in
the
Market
Place
.
He
promised
me
the
sight
of
a
capital
gun
he
is
just
going
to
send
off
;
said
he
would
keep
it
unpacked
to
the
last
possible
moment
,
that
I
might
see
it
;
and
if
I
do
not
turn
back
now
,
I
have
no
chance
.
By
his
description
,
a
good
deal
like
the
second
size
double-barrel
of
mine
,
which
you
shot
with
one
day
round
Winthrop
.
"
There
could
not
be
an
objection
.
There
could
be
only
the
most
proper
alacrity
,
a
most
obliging
compliance
for
public
view
;
and
smiles
reined
in
and
spirits
dancing
in
private
rapture
.
In
half
a
minute
Charles
was
at
the
bottom
of
Union
Street
again
,
and
the
other
two
proceeding
together
:
and
soon
words
enough
had
passed
between
them
to
decide
their
direction
towards
the
comparatively
quiet
and
retired
gravel
walk
,
where
the
power
of
conversation
would
make
the
present
hour
a
blessing
indeed
,
and
prepare
it
for
all
the
immortality
which
the
happiest
recollections
of
their
own
future
lives
could
bestow
.
There
they
exchanged
again
those
feelings
and
those
promises
which
had
once
before
seemed
to
secure
everything
,
but
which
had
been
followed
by
so
many
,
many
years
of
division
and
estrangement
.
There
they
returned
again
into
the
past
,
more
exquisitely
happy
,
perhaps
,
in
their
re-union
,
than
when
it
had
been
first
projected
;
more
tender
,
more
tried
,
more
fixed
in
a
knowledge
of
each
other
's
character
,
truth
,
and
attachment
;
more
equal
to
act
,
more
justified
in
acting
.
And
there
,
as
they
slowly
paced
the
gradual
ascent
,
heedless
of
every
group
around
them
,
seeing
neither
sauntering
politicians
,
bustling
housekeepers
,
flirting
girls
,
nor
nursery-maids
and
children
,
they
could
indulge
in
those
retrospections
and
acknowledgements
,
and
especially
in
those
explanations
of
what
had
directly
preceded
the
present
moment
,
which
were
so
poignant
and
so
ceaseless
in
interest
.
All
the
little
variations
of
the
last
week
were
gone
through
;
and
of
yesterday
and
today
there
could
scarcely
be
an
end
.
She
had
not
mistaken
him
.
Jealousy
of
Mr
Elliot
had
been
the
retarding
weight
,
the
doubt
,
the
torment
.
That
had
begun
to
operate
in
the
very
hour
of
first
meeting
her
in
Bath
;
that
had
returned
,
after
a
short
suspension
,
to
ruin
the
concert
;
and
that
had
influenced
him
in
everything
he
had
said
and
done
,
or
omitted
to
say
and
do
,
in
the
last
four-and-twenty
hours
.
It
had
been
gradually
yielding
to
the
better
hopes
which
her
looks
,
or
words
,
or
actions
occasionally
encouraged
;
it
had
been
vanquished
at
last
by
those
sentiments
and
those
tones
which
had
reached
him
while
she
talked
with
Captain
Harville
;
and
under
the
irresistible
governance
of
which
he
had
seized
a
sheet
of
paper
,
and
poured
out
his
feelings
.
Of
what
he
had
then
written
,
nothing
was
to
be
retracted
or
qualified
.
He
persisted
in
having
loved
none
but
her
.
She
had
never
been
supplanted
.
He
never
even
believed
himself
to
see
her
equal
.
Thus
much
indeed
he
was
obliged
to
acknowledge
:
that
he
had
been
constant
unconsciously
,
nay
unintentionally
;
that
he
had
meant
to
forget
her
,
and
believed
it
to
be
done
.
He
had
imagined
himself
indifferent
,
when
he
had
only
been
angry
;
and
he
had
been
unjust
to
her
merits
,
because
he
had
been
a
sufferer
from
them
.
Her
character
was
now
fixed
on
his
mind
as
perfection
itself
,
maintaining
the
loveliest
medium
of
fortitude
and
gentleness
;
but
he
was
obliged
to
acknowledge
that
only
at
Uppercross
had
he
learnt
to
do
her
justice
,
and
only
at
Lyme
had
he
begun
to
understand
himself
.
At
Lyme
,
he
had
received
lessons
of
more
than
one
sort
.
The
passing
admiration
of
Mr
Elliot
had
at
least
roused
him
,
and
the
scenes
on
the
Cobb
and
at
Captain
Harville
's
had
fixed
her
superiority
.
In
his
preceding
attempts
to
attach
himself
to
Louisa
Musgrove
(
the
attempts
of
angry
pride
)
,
he
protested
that
he
had
for
ever
felt
it
to
be
impossible
;
that
he
had
not
cared
,
could
not
care
,
for
Louisa
;
though
till
that
day
,
till
the
leisure
for
reflection
which
followed
it
,
he
had
not
understood
the
perfect
excellence
of
the
mind
with
which
Louisa
's
could
so
ill
bear
a
comparison
,
or
the
perfect
unrivalled
hold
it
possessed
over
his
own
.
There
,
he
had
learnt
to
distinguish
between
the
steadiness
of
principle
and
the
obstinacy
of
self-will
,
between
the
darings
of
heedlessness
and
the
resolution
of
a
collected
mind
.
There
he
had
seen
everything
to
exalt
in
his
estimation
the
woman
he
had
lost
;
and
there
begun
to
deplore
the
pride
,
the
folly
,
the
madness
of
resentment
,
which
had
kept
him
from
trying
to
regain
her
when
thrown
in
his
way
.
From
that
period
his
penance
had
become
severe
.
He
had
no
sooner
been
free
from
the
horror
and
remorse
attending
the
first
few
days
of
Louisa
's
accident
,
no
sooner
begun
to
feel
himself
alive
again
,
than
he
had
begun
to
feel
himself
,
though
alive
,
not
at
liberty
.