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Her
brother
and
sister
came
back
delighted
with
their
new
acquaintance
,
and
their
visit
in
general
.
There
had
been
music
,
singing
,
talking
,
laughing
,
all
that
was
most
agreeable
;
charming
manners
in
Captain
Wentworth
,
no
shyness
or
reserve
;
they
seemed
all
to
know
each
other
perfectly
,
and
he
was
coming
the
very
next
morning
to
shoot
with
Charles
.
He
was
to
come
to
breakfast
,
but
not
at
the
Cottage
,
though
that
had
been
proposed
at
first
;
but
then
he
had
been
pressed
to
come
to
the
Great
House
instead
,
and
he
seemed
afraid
of
being
in
Mrs
Charles
Musgrove
's
way
,
on
account
of
the
child
,
and
therefore
,
somehow
,
they
hardly
knew
how
,
it
ended
in
Charles
's
being
to
meet
him
to
breakfast
at
his
father
's
.
Anne
understood
it
.
He
wished
to
avoid
seeing
her
.
He
had
inquired
after
her
,
she
found
,
slightly
,
as
might
suit
a
former
slight
acquaintance
,
seeming
to
acknowledge
such
as
she
had
acknowledged
,
actuated
,
perhaps
,
by
the
same
view
of
escaping
introduction
when
they
were
to
meet
.
The
morning
hours
of
the
Cottage
were
always
later
than
those
of
the
other
house
,
and
on
the
morrow
the
difference
was
so
great
that
Mary
and
Anne
were
not
more
than
beginning
breakfast
when
Charles
came
in
to
say
that
they
were
just
setting
off
,
that
he
was
come
for
his
dogs
,
that
his
sisters
were
following
with
Captain
Wentworth
;
his
sisters
meaning
to
visit
Mary
and
the
child
,
and
Captain
Wentworth
proposing
also
to
wait
on
her
for
a
few
minutes
if
not
inconvenient
;
and
though
Charles
had
answered
for
the
child
's
being
in
no
such
state
as
could
make
it
inconvenient
,
Captain
Wentworth
would
not
be
satisfied
without
his
running
on
to
give
notice
.
Mary
,
very
much
gratified
by
this
attention
,
was
delighted
to
receive
him
,
while
a
thousand
feelings
rushed
on
Anne
,
of
which
this
was
the
most
consoling
,
that
it
would
soon
be
over
.
And
it
was
soon
over
.
In
two
minutes
after
Charles
's
preparation
,
the
others
appeared
;
they
were
in
the
drawing-room
.
Her
eye
half
met
Captain
Wentworth
's
,
a
bow
,
a
curtsey
passed
;
she
heard
his
voice
;
he
talked
to
Mary
,
said
all
that
was
right
,
said
something
to
the
Miss
Musgroves
,
enough
to
mark
an
easy
footing
;
the
room
seemed
full
,
full
of
persons
and
voices
,
but
a
few
minutes
ended
it
.
Charles
shewed
himself
at
the
window
,
all
was
ready
,
their
visitor
had
bowed
and
was
gone
,
the
Miss
Musgroves
were
gone
too
,
suddenly
resolving
to
walk
to
the
end
of
the
village
with
the
sportsmen
:
the
room
was
cleared
,
and
Anne
might
finish
her
breakfast
as
she
could
.
"
It
is
over
!
it
is
over
!
"
she
repeated
to
herself
again
and
again
,
in
nervous
gratitude
.
"
The
worst
is
over
!
"
Mary
talked
,
but
she
could
not
attend
.
She
had
seen
him
.
They
had
met
.
They
had
been
once
more
in
the
same
room
.
Soon
,
however
,
she
began
to
reason
with
herself
,
and
try
to
be
feeling
less
.
Eight
years
,
almost
eight
years
had
passed
,
since
all
had
been
given
up
.
How
absurd
to
be
resuming
the
agitation
which
such
an
interval
had
banished
into
distance
and
indistinctness
!
What
might
not
eight
years
do
?
Events
of
every
description
,
changes
,
alienations
,
removals
--
all
,
all
must
be
comprised
in
it
,
and
oblivion
of
the
past
--
how
natural
,
how
certain
too
!
It
included
nearly
a
third
part
of
her
own
life
.
Alas
!
with
all
her
reasoning
,
she
found
,
that
to
retentive
feelings
eight
years
may
be
little
more
than
nothing
.
Now
,
how
were
his
sentiments
to
be
read
?
Was
this
like
wishing
to
avoid
her
?
And
the
next
moment
she
was
hating
herself
for
the
folly
which
asked
the
question
.