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He
was
cut
short
by
the
eager
attacks
of
the
little
boys
,
clinging
to
him
like
an
old
friend
,
and
declaring
he
should
not
go
;
and
being
too
much
engrossed
by
proposals
of
carrying
them
away
in
his
coat
pockets
,
&
c.
,
to
have
another
moment
for
finishing
or
recollecting
what
he
had
begun
,
Anne
was
left
to
persuade
herself
,
as
well
as
she
could
,
that
the
same
brother
must
still
be
in
question
.
She
could
not
,
however
,
reach
such
a
degree
of
certainty
,
as
not
to
be
anxious
to
hear
whether
anything
had
been
said
on
the
subject
at
the
other
house
,
where
the
Crofts
had
previously
been
calling
.
The
folks
of
the
Great
House
were
to
spend
the
evening
of
this
day
at
the
Cottage
;
and
it
being
now
too
late
in
the
year
for
such
visits
to
be
made
on
foot
,
the
coach
was
beginning
to
be
listened
for
,
when
the
youngest
Miss
Musgrove
walked
in
.
That
she
was
coming
to
apologize
,
and
that
they
should
have
to
spend
the
evening
by
themselves
,
was
the
first
black
idea
;
and
Mary
was
quite
ready
to
be
affronted
,
when
Louisa
made
all
right
by
saying
,
that
she
only
came
on
foot
,
to
leave
more
room
for
the
harp
,
which
was
bringing
in
the
carriage
.
"
And
I
will
tell
you
our
reason
,
"
she
added
,
"
and
all
about
it
.
I
am
come
on
to
give
you
notice
,
that
papa
and
mamma
are
out
of
spirits
this
evening
,
especially
mamma
;
she
is
thinking
so
much
of
poor
Richard
!
And
we
agreed
it
would
be
best
to
have
the
harp
,
for
it
seems
to
amuse
her
more
than
the
piano-forte
.
I
will
tell
you
why
she
is
out
of
spirits
.
When
the
Crofts
called
this
morning
,
(
they
called
here
afterwards
,
did
not
they
?
)
,
they
happened
to
say
,
that
her
brother
,
Captain
Wentworth
,
is
just
returned
to
England
,
or
paid
off
,
or
something
,
and
is
coming
to
see
them
almost
directly
;
and
most
unluckily
it
came
into
mamma
's
head
,
when
they
were
gone
,
that
Wentworth
,
or
something
very
like
it
,
was
the
name
of
poor
Richard
's
captain
at
one
time
;
I
do
not
know
when
or
where
,
but
a
great
while
before
he
died
,
poor
fellow
!
And
upon
looking
over
his
letters
and
things
,
she
found
it
was
so
,
and
is
perfectly
sure
that
this
must
be
the
very
man
,
and
her
head
is
quite
full
of
it
,
and
of
poor
Richard
!
So
we
must
be
as
merry
as
we
can
,
that
she
may
not
be
dwelling
upon
such
gloomy
things
.
"
The
real
circumstances
of
this
pathetic
piece
of
family
history
were
,
that
the
Musgroves
had
had
the
ill
fortune
of
a
very
troublesome
,
hopeless
son
;
and
the
good
fortune
to
lose
him
before
he
reached
his
twentieth
year
;
that
he
had
been
sent
to
sea
because
he
was
stupid
and
unmanageable
on
shore
;
that
he
had
been
very
little
cared
for
at
any
time
by
his
family
,
though
quite
as
much
as
he
deserved
;
seldom
heard
of
,
and
scarcely
at
all
regretted
,
when
the
intelligence
of
his
death
abroad
had
worked
its
way
to
Uppercross
,
two
years
before
.
He
had
,
in
fact
,
though
his
sisters
were
now
doing
all
they
could
for
him
,
by
calling
him
"
poor
Richard
,
"
been
nothing
better
than
a
thick-headed
,
unfeeling
,
unprofitable
Dick
Musgrove
,
who
had
never
done
anything
to
entitle
himself
to
more
than
the
abbreviation
of
his
name
,
living
or
dead
.
He
had
been
several
years
at
sea
,
and
had
,
in
the
course
of
those
removals
to
which
all
midshipmen
are
liable
,
and
especially
such
midshipmen
as
every
captain
wishes
to
get
rid
of
,
been
six
months
on
board
Captain
Frederick
Wentworth
's
frigate
,
the
Laconia
;
and
from
the
Laconia
he
had
,
under
the
influence
of
his
captain
,
written
the
only
two
letters
which
his
father
and
mother
had
ever
received
from
him
during
the
whole
of
his
absence
;
that
is
to
say
,
the
only
two
disinterested
letters
;
all
the
rest
had
been
mere
applications
for
money
.
In
each
letter
he
had
spoken
well
of
his
captain
;
but
yet
,
so
little
were
they
in
the
habit
of
attending
to
such
matters
,
so
unobservant
and
incurious
were
they
as
to
the
names
of
men
or
ships
,
that
it
had
made
scarcely
any
impression
at
the
time
;
and
that
Mrs
Musgrove
should
have
been
suddenly
struck
,
this
very
day
,
with
a
recollection
of
the
name
of
Wentworth
,
as
connected
with
her
son
,
seemed
one
of
those
extraordinary
bursts
of
mind
which
do
sometimes
occur
.
She
had
gone
to
her
letters
,
and
found
it
all
as
she
supposed
;
and
the
re-perusal
of
these
letters
,
after
so
long
an
interval
,
her
poor
son
gone
for
ever
,
and
all
the
strength
of
his
faults
forgotten
,
had
affected
her
spirits
exceedingly
,
and
thrown
her
into
greater
grief
for
him
than
she
had
know
on
first
hearing
of
his
death
.
Mr
Musgrove
was
,
in
a
lesser
degree
,
affected
likewise
;
and
when
they
reached
the
cottage
,
they
were
evidently
in
want
,
first
,
of
being
listened
to
anew
on
this
subject
,
and
afterwards
,
of
all
the
relief
which
cheerful
companions
could
give
them
.