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131
"
There
is
hardly
any
personal
defect
,
"
replied
Anne
,
"
which
an
agreeable
manner
might
not
gradually
reconcile
one
to
.
"
132
"
I
think
very
differently
,
"
answered
Elizabeth
,
shortly
;
"
an
agreeable
manner
may
set
off
handsome
features
,
but
can
never
alter
plain
ones
.
However
,
at
any
rate
,
as
I
have
a
great
deal
more
at
stake
on
this
point
than
anybody
else
can
have
,
I
think
it
rather
unnecessary
in
you
to
be
advising
me
.
"
133
Anne
had
done
;
glad
that
it
was
over
,
and
not
absolutely
hopeless
of
doing
good
.
Elizabeth
,
though
resenting
the
suspicion
,
might
yet
be
made
observant
by
it
.
Отключить рекламу
134
The
last
office
of
the
four
carriage-horses
was
to
draw
Sir
Walter
,
Miss
Elliot
,
and
Mrs
Clay
to
Bath
.
The
party
drove
off
in
very
good
spirits
;
Sir
Walter
prepared
with
condescending
bows
for
all
the
afflicted
tenantry
and
cottagers
who
might
have
had
a
hint
to
show
themselves
,
and
Anne
walked
up
at
the
same
time
,
in
a
sort
of
desolate
tranquillity
,
to
the
Lodge
,
where
she
was
to
spend
the
first
week
.
135
Her
friend
was
not
in
better
spirits
than
herself
.
Lady
Russell
felt
this
break-up
of
the
family
exceedingly
.
Their
respectability
was
as
dear
to
her
as
her
own
,
and
a
daily
intercourse
had
become
precious
by
habit
.
It
was
painful
to
look
upon
their
deserted
grounds
,
and
still
worse
to
anticipate
the
new
hands
they
were
to
fall
into
;
and
to
escape
the
solitariness
and
the
melancholy
of
so
altered
a
village
,
and
be
out
of
the
way
when
Admiral
and
Mrs
Croft
first
arrived
,
she
had
determined
to
make
her
own
absence
from
home
begin
when
she
must
give
up
Anne
.
136
Accordingly
their
removal
was
made
together
,
and
Anne
was
set
down
at
Uppercross
Cottage
,
in
the
first
stage
of
Lady
Russell
's
journey
.
137
Uppercross
was
a
moderate-sized
village
,
which
a
few
years
back
had
been
completely
in
the
old
English
style
,
containing
only
two
houses
superior
in
appearance
to
those
of
the
yeomen
and
labourers
;
the
mansion
of
the
squire
,
with
its
high
walls
,
great
gates
,
and
old
trees
,
substantial
and
unmodernized
,
and
the
compact
,
tight
parsonage
,
enclosed
in
its
own
neat
garden
,
with
a
vine
and
a
pear-tree
trained
round
its
casements
;
but
upon
the
marriage
of
the
young
'
squire
,
it
had
received
the
improvement
of
a
farm-house
elevated
into
a
cottage
,
for
his
residence
,
and
Uppercross
Cottage
,
with
its
veranda
,
French
windows
,
and
other
prettiness
,
was
quite
as
likely
to
catch
the
traveller
's
eye
as
the
more
consistent
and
considerable
aspect
and
premises
of
the
Great
House
,
about
a
quarter
of
a
mile
farther
on
.
Отключить рекламу
138
Here
Anne
had
often
been
staying
.
She
knew
the
ways
of
Uppercross
as
well
as
those
of
Kellynch
.
The
two
families
were
so
continually
meeting
,
so
much
in
the
habit
of
running
in
and
out
of
each
other
's
house
at
all
hours
,
that
it
was
rather
a
surprise
to
her
to
find
Mary
alone
;
but
being
alone
,
her
being
unwell
and
out
of
spirits
was
almost
a
matter
of
course
.
Though
better
endowed
than
the
elder
sister
,
Mary
had
not
Anne
's
understanding
nor
temper
.
While
well
,
and
happy
,
and
properly
attended
to
,
she
had
great
good
humour
and
excellent
spirits
;
but
any
indisposition
sunk
her
completely
.
139
She
had
no
resources
for
solitude
;
and
inheriting
a
considerable
share
of
the
Elliot
self-importance
,
was
very
prone
to
add
to
every
other
distress
that
of
fancying
herself
neglected
and
ill-used
.
In
person
,
she
was
inferior
to
both
sisters
,
and
had
,
even
in
her
bloom
,
only
reached
the
dignity
of
being
"
a
fine
girl
.
"
She
was
now
lying
on
the
faded
sofa
of
the
pretty
little
drawing-room
,
the
once
elegant
furniture
of
which
had
been
gradually
growing
shabby
,
under
the
influence
of
four
summers
and
two
children
;
and
,
on
Anne
's
appearing
,
greeted
her
with
--
140
"
So
,
you
are
come
at
last
!
I
began
to
think
I
should
never
see
you
.
I
am
so
ill
I
can
hardly
speak
.
I
have
not
seen
a
creature
the
whole
morning
!
"