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Something
occurred
,
however
,
to
give
her
a
different
duty
.
Mary
,
often
a
little
unwell
,
and
always
thinking
a
great
deal
of
her
own
complaints
,
and
always
in
the
habit
of
claiming
Anne
when
anything
was
the
matter
,
was
indisposed
;
and
foreseeing
that
she
should
not
have
a
day
's
health
all
the
autumn
,
entreated
,
or
rather
required
her
,
for
it
was
hardly
entreaty
,
to
come
to
Uppercross
Cottage
,
and
bear
her
company
as
long
as
she
should
want
her
,
instead
of
going
to
Bath
.
"
I
can
not
possibly
do
without
Anne
,
"
was
Mary
's
reasoning
;
and
Elizabeth
's
reply
was
,
"
Then
I
am
sure
Anne
had
better
stay
,
for
nobody
will
want
her
in
Bath
.
"
To
be
claimed
as
a
good
,
though
in
an
improper
style
,
is
at
least
better
than
being
rejected
as
no
good
at
all
;
and
Anne
,
glad
to
be
thought
of
some
use
,
glad
to
have
anything
marked
out
as
a
duty
,
and
certainly
not
sorry
to
have
the
scene
of
it
in
the
country
,
and
her
own
dear
country
,
readily
agreed
to
stay
.
This
invitation
of
Mary
's
removed
all
Lady
Russell
's
difficulties
,
and
it
was
consequently
soon
settled
that
Anne
should
not
go
to
Bath
till
Lady
Russell
took
her
,
and
that
all
the
intervening
time
should
be
divided
between
Uppercross
Cottage
and
Kellynch
Lodge
.
So
far
all
was
perfectly
right
;
but
Lady
Russell
was
almost
startled
by
the
wrong
of
one
part
of
the
Kellynch
Hall
plan
,
when
it
burst
on
her
,
which
was
,
Mrs
Clay
's
being
engaged
to
go
to
Bath
with
Sir
Walter
and
Elizabeth
,
as
a
most
important
and
valuable
assistant
to
the
latter
in
all
the
business
before
her
.
Lady
Russell
was
extremely
sorry
that
such
a
measure
should
have
been
resorted
to
at
all
,
wondered
,
grieved
,
and
feared
;
and
the
affront
it
contained
to
Anne
,
in
Mrs
Clay
's
being
of
so
much
use
,
while
Anne
could
be
of
none
,
was
a
very
sore
aggravation
.
Anne
herself
was
become
hardened
to
such
affronts
;
but
she
felt
the
imprudence
of
the
arrangement
quite
as
keenly
as
Lady
Russell
.
With
a
great
deal
of
quiet
observation
,
and
a
knowledge
,
which
she
often
wished
less
,
of
her
father
's
character
,
she
was
sensible
that
results
the
most
serious
to
his
family
from
the
intimacy
were
more
than
possible
.
She
did
not
imagine
that
her
father
had
at
present
an
idea
of
the
kind
.
Mrs
Clay
had
freckles
,
and
a
projecting
tooth
,
and
a
clumsy
wrist
,
which
he
was
continually
making
severe
remarks
upon
,
in
her
absence
;
but
she
was
young
,
and
certainly
altogether
well-looking
,
and
possessed
,
in
an
acute
mind
and
assiduous
pleasing
manners
,
infinitely
more
dangerous
attractions
than
any
merely
personal
might
have
been
.
Anne
was
so
impressed
by
the
degree
of
their
danger
,
that
she
could
not
excuse
herself
from
trying
to
make
it
perceptible
to
her
sister
.
She
had
little
hope
of
success
;
but
Elizabeth
,
who
in
the
event
of
such
a
reverse
would
be
so
much
more
to
be
pitied
than
herself
,
should
never
,
she
thought
,
have
reason
to
reproach
her
for
giving
no
warning
.
She
spoke
,
and
seemed
only
to
offend
.
Elizabeth
could
not
conceive
how
such
an
absurd
suspicion
should
occur
to
her
,
and
indignantly
answered
for
each
party
's
perfectly
knowing
their
situation
.
"
Mrs
Clay
,
"
said
she
,
warmly
,
"
never
forgets
who
she
is
;
and
as
I
am
rather
better
acquainted
with
her
sentiments
than
you
can
be
,
I
can
assure
you
,
that
upon
the
subject
of
marriage
they
are
particularly
nice
,
and
that
she
reprobates
all
inequality
of
condition
and
rank
more
strongly
than
most
people
.
And
as
to
my
father
,
I
really
should
not
have
thought
that
he
,
who
has
kept
himself
single
so
long
for
our
sakes
,
need
be
suspected
now
.
If
Mrs
Clay
were
a
very
beautiful
woman
,
I
grant
you
,
it
might
be
wrong
to
have
her
so
much
with
me
;
not
that
anything
in
the
world
,
I
am
sure
,
would
induce
my
father
to
make
a
degrading
match
,
but
he
might
be
rendered
unhappy
.
But
poor
Mrs
Clay
who
,
with
all
her
merits
,
can
never
have
been
reckoned
tolerably
pretty
,
I
really
think
poor
Mrs
Clay
may
be
staying
here
in
perfect
safety
.
One
would
imagine
you
had
never
heard
my
father
speak
of
her
personal
misfortunes
,
though
I
know
you
must
fifty
times
.
That
tooth
of
her
's
and
those
freckles
.
Freckles
do
not
disgust
me
so
very
much
as
they
do
him
.
I
have
known
a
face
not
materially
disfigured
by
a
few
,
but
he
abominates
them
.
You
must
have
heard
him
notice
Mrs
Clay
's
freckles
.
"