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It
was
,
perhaps
,
one
of
those
cases
in
which
advice
is
good
or
bad
only
as
the
event
decides
;
and
for
myself
,
I
certainly
never
should
,
in
any
circumstance
of
tolerable
similarity
,
give
such
advice
.
But
I
mean
,
that
I
was
right
in
submitting
to
her
,
and
that
if
I
had
done
otherwise
,
I
should
have
suffered
more
in
continuing
the
engagement
than
I
did
even
in
giving
it
up
,
because
I
should
have
suffered
in
my
conscience
.
I
have
now
,
as
far
as
such
a
sentiment
is
allowable
in
human
nature
,
nothing
to
reproach
myself
with
;
and
if
I
mistake
not
,
a
strong
sense
of
duty
is
no
bad
part
of
a
woman
's
portion
.
"
He
looked
at
her
,
looked
at
Lady
Russell
,
and
looking
again
at
her
,
replied
,
as
if
in
cool
deliberation
--
"
Not
yet
.
But
there
are
hopes
of
her
being
forgiven
in
time
.
I
trust
to
being
in
charity
with
her
soon
.
But
I
too
have
been
thinking
over
the
past
,
and
a
question
has
suggested
itself
,
whether
there
may
not
have
been
one
person
more
my
enemy
even
than
that
lady
?
My
own
self
.
Tell
me
if
,
when
I
returned
to
England
in
the
year
eight
,
with
a
few
thousand
pounds
,
and
was
posted
into
the
Laconia
,
if
I
had
then
written
to
you
,
would
you
have
answered
my
letter
?
Would
you
,
in
short
,
have
renewed
the
engagement
then
?
"
"
Would
I
!
"
was
all
her
answer
;
but
the
accent
was
decisive
enough
.
"
Good
God
!
"
he
cried
,
"
you
would
!
It
is
not
that
I
did
not
think
of
it
,
or
desire
it
,
as
what
could
alone
crown
all
my
other
success
;
but
I
was
proud
,
too
proud
to
ask
again
.
I
did
not
understand
you
.
I
shut
my
eyes
,
and
would
not
understand
you
,
or
do
you
justice
This
is
a
recollection
which
ought
to
make
me
forgive
every
one
sooner
than
myself
.
Six
years
of
separation
and
suffering
might
have
been
spared
.
It
is
a
sort
of
pain
,
too
,
which
is
new
to
me
.
I
have
been
used
to
the
gratification
of
believing
myself
to
earn
every
blessing
that
I
enjoyed
.
I
have
valued
myself
on
honourable
toils
and
just
rewards
.
Like
other
great
men
under
reverses
,
"
he
added
,
with
a
smile
.
"
I
must
endeavour
to
subdue
my
mind
to
my
fortune
.
I
must
learn
to
brook
being
happier
than
I
deserve
.
"
Who
can
be
in
doubt
of
what
followed
?
When
any
two
young
people
take
it
into
their
heads
to
marry
,
they
are
pretty
sure
by
perseverance
to
carry
their
point
,
be
they
ever
so
poor
,
or
ever
so
imprudent
,
or
ever
so
little
likely
to
be
necessary
to
each
other
's
ultimate
comfort
.
This
may
be
bad
morality
to
conclude
with
,
but
I
believe
it
to
be
truth
;
and
if
such
parties
succeed
,
how
should
a
Captain
Wentworth
and
an
Anne
Elliot
,
with
the
advantage
of
maturity
of
mind
,
consciousness
of
right
,
and
one
independent
fortune
between
them
,
fail
of
bearing
down
every
opposition
?
They
might
in
fact
,
have
borne
down
a
great
deal
more
than
they
met
with
,
for
there
was
little
to
distress
them
beyond
the
want
of
graciousness
and
warmth
.
Sir
Walter
made
no
objection
,
and
Elizabeth
did
nothing
worse
than
look
cold
and
unconcerned
.
Captain
Wentworth
,
with
five-and-twenty
thousand
pounds
,
and
as
high
in
his
profession
as
merit
and
activity
could
place
him
,
was
no
longer
nobody
.
He
was
now
esteemed
quite
worthy
to
address
the
daughter
of
a
foolish
,
spendthrift
baronet
,
who
had
not
had
principle
or
sense
enough
to
maintain
himself
in
the
situation
in
which
Providence
had
placed
him
,
and
who
could
give
his
daughter
at
present
but
a
small
part
of
the
share
of
ten
thousand
pounds
which
must
be
hers
hereafter
.
Sir
Walter
,
indeed
,
though
he
had
no
affection
for
Anne
,
and
no
vanity
flattered
,
to
make
him
really
happy
on
the
occasion
,
was
very
far
from
thinking
it
a
bad
match
for
her
.
On
the
contrary
,
when
he
saw
more
of
Captain
Wentworth
,
saw
him
repeatedly
by
daylight
,
and
eyed
him
well
,
he
was
very
much
struck
by
his
personal
claims
,
and
felt
that
his
superiority
of
appearance
might
be
not
unfairly
balanced
against
her
superiority
of
rank
;
and
all
this
,
assisted
by
his
well-sounding
name
,
enabled
Sir
Walter
at
last
to
prepare
his
pen
,
with
a
very
good
grace
,
for
the
insertion
of
the
marriage
in
the
volume
of
honour
.
The
only
one
among
them
,
whose
opposition
of
feeling
could
excite
any
serious
anxiety
was
Lady
Russell
.
Anne
knew
that
Lady
Russell
must
be
suffering
some
pain
in
understanding
and
relinquishing
Mr
Elliot
,
and
be
making
some
struggles
to
become
truly
acquainted
with
,
and
do
justice
to
Captain
Wentworth
.
This
however
was
what
Lady
Russell
had
now
to
do
.
She
must
learn
to
feel
that
she
had
been
mistaken
with
regard
to
both
;
that
she
had
been
unfairly
influenced
by
appearances
in
each
;
that
because
Captain
Wentworth
's
manners
had
not
suited
her
own
ideas
,
she
had
been
too
quick
in
suspecting
them
to
indicate
a
character
of
dangerous
impetuosity
;
and
that
because
Mr
Elliot
's
manners
had
precisely
pleased
her
in
their
propriety
and
correctness
,
their
general
politeness
and
suavity
,
she
had
been
too
quick
in
receiving
them
as
the
certain
result
of
the
most
correct
opinions
and
well-regulated
mind
.
There
was
nothing
less
for
Lady
Russell
to
do
,
than
to
admit
that
she
had
been
pretty
completely
wrong
,
and
to
take
up
a
new
set
of
opinions
and
of
hopes
.