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There
is
a
quickness
of
perception
in
some
,
a
nicety
in
the
discernment
of
character
,
a
natural
penetration
,
in
short
,
which
no
experience
in
others
can
equal
,
and
Lady
Russell
had
been
less
gifted
in
this
part
of
understanding
than
her
young
friend
.
But
she
was
a
very
good
woman
,
and
if
her
second
object
was
to
be
sensible
and
well-judging
,
her
first
was
to
see
Anne
happy
.
She
loved
Anne
better
than
she
loved
her
own
abilities
;
and
when
the
awkwardness
of
the
beginning
was
over
,
found
little
hardship
in
attaching
herself
as
a
mother
to
the
man
who
was
securing
the
happiness
of
her
other
child
.
Of
all
the
family
,
Mary
was
probably
the
one
most
immediately
gratified
by
the
circumstance
.
It
was
creditable
to
have
a
sister
married
,
and
she
might
flatter
herself
with
having
been
greatly
instrumental
to
the
connexion
,
by
keeping
Anne
with
her
in
the
autumn
;
and
as
her
own
sister
must
be
better
than
her
husband
's
sisters
,
it
was
very
agreeable
that
Captain
Wentworth
should
be
a
richer
man
than
either
Captain
Benwick
or
Charles
Hayter
.
She
had
something
to
suffer
,
perhaps
,
when
they
came
into
contact
again
,
in
seeing
Anne
restored
to
the
rights
of
seniority
,
and
the
mistress
of
a
very
pretty
landaulette
;
but
she
had
a
future
to
look
forward
to
,
of
powerful
consolation
.
Anne
had
no
Uppercross
Hall
before
her
,
no
landed
estate
,
no
headship
of
a
family
;
and
if
they
could
but
keep
Captain
Wentworth
from
being
made
a
baronet
,
she
would
not
change
situations
with
Anne
.
It
would
be
well
for
the
eldest
sister
if
she
were
equally
satisfied
with
her
situation
,
for
a
change
is
not
very
probable
there
.
She
had
soon
the
mortification
of
seeing
Mr
Elliot
withdraw
,
and
no
one
of
proper
condition
has
since
presented
himself
to
raise
even
the
unfounded
hopes
which
sunk
with
him
.
The
news
of
his
cousins
Anne
's
engagement
burst
on
Mr
Elliot
most
unexpectedly
.
It
deranged
his
best
plan
of
domestic
happiness
,
his
best
hope
of
keeping
Sir
Walter
single
by
the
watchfulness
which
a
son-in-law
's
rights
would
have
given
.
But
,
though
discomfited
and
disappointed
,
he
could
still
do
something
for
his
own
interest
and
his
own
enjoyment
.
He
soon
quitted
Bath
;
and
on
Mrs
Clay
's
quitting
it
soon
afterwards
,
and
being
next
heard
of
as
established
under
his
protection
in
London
,
it
was
evident
how
double
a
game
he
had
been
playing
,
and
how
determined
he
was
to
save
himself
from
being
cut
out
by
one
artful
woman
,
at
least
.
Mrs
Clay
's
affections
had
overpowered
her
interest
,
and
she
had
sacrificed
,
for
the
young
man
's
sake
,
the
possibility
of
scheming
longer
for
Sir
Walter
.
She
has
abilities
,
however
,
as
well
as
affections
;
and
it
is
now
a
doubtful
point
whether
his
cunning
,
or
hers
,
may
finally
carry
the
day
;
whether
,
after
preventing
her
from
being
the
wife
of
Sir
Walter
,
he
may
not
be
wheedled
and
caressed
at
last
into
making
her
the
wife
of
Sir
William
.
It
can
not
be
doubted
that
Sir
Walter
and
Elizabeth
were
shocked
and
mortified
by
the
loss
of
their
companion
,
and
the
discovery
of
their
deception
in
her
.
They
had
their
great
cousins
,
to
be
sure
,
to
resort
to
for
comfort
;
but
they
must
long
feel
that
to
flatter
and
follow
others
,
without
being
flattered
and
followed
in
turn
,
is
but
a
state
of
half
enjoyment
.
Anne
,
satisfied
at
a
very
early
period
of
Lady
Russell
's
meaning
to
love
Captain
Wentworth
as
she
ought
,
had
no
other
alloy
to
the
happiness
of
her
prospects
than
what
arose
from
the
consciousness
of
having
no
relations
to
bestow
on
him
which
a
man
of
sense
could
value
.
There
she
felt
her
own
inferiority
very
keenly
.
The
disproportion
in
their
fortune
was
nothing
;
it
did
not
give
her
a
moment
's
regret
;
but
to
have
no
family
to
receive
and
estimate
him
properly
,
nothing
of
respectability
,
of
harmony
,
of
good
will
to
offer
in
return
for
all
the
worth
and
all
the
prompt
welcome
which
met
her
in
his
brothers
and
sisters
,
was
a
source
of
as
lively
pain
as
her
mind
could
well
be
sensible
of
under
circumstances
of
otherwise
strong
felicity
.
She
had
but
two
friends
in
the
world
to
add
to
his
list
,
Lady
Russell
and
Mrs
Smith
.
To
those
,
however
,
he
was
very
well
disposed
to
attach
himself
.
Lady
Russell
,
in
spite
of
all
her
former
transgressions
,
he
could
now
value
from
his
heart
.
While
he
was
not
obliged
to
say
that
he
believed
her
to
have
been
right
in
originally
dividing
them
,
he
was
ready
to
say
almost
everything
else
in
her
favour
,
and
as
for
Mrs
Smith
,
she
had
claims
of
various
kinds
to
recommend
her
quickly
and
permanently
.
Her
recent
good
offices
by
Anne
had
been
enough
in
themselves
,
and
their
marriage
,
instead
of
depriving
her
of
one
friend
,
secured
her
two
She
was
their
earliest
visitor
in
their
settled
life
;
and
Captain
Wentworth
,
by
putting
her
in
the
way
of
recovering
her
husband
's
property
in
the
West
Indies
,
by
writing
for
her
,
acting
for
her
,
and
seeing
her
through
all
the
petty
difficulties
of
the
case
with
the
activity
and
exertion
of
a
fearless
man
and
a
determined
friend
,
fully
requited
the
services
which
she
had
rendered
,
or
ever
meant
to
render
,
to
his
wife
.