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31
"
If
we
can
persuade
your
father
to
all
this
,
"
said
Lady
Russell
,
looking
over
her
paper
,
"
much
may
be
done
.
32
If
he
will
adopt
these
regulations
,
in
seven
years
he
will
be
clear
;
and
I
hope
we
may
be
able
to
convince
him
and
Elizabeth
,
that
Kellynch
Hall
has
a
respectability
in
itself
which
can
not
be
affected
by
these
reductions
;
and
that
the
true
dignity
of
Sir
Walter
Elliot
will
be
very
far
from
lessened
in
the
eyes
of
sensible
people
,
by
acting
like
a
man
of
principle
.
What
will
he
be
doing
,
in
fact
,
but
what
very
many
of
our
first
families
have
done
,
or
ought
to
do
?
There
will
be
nothing
singular
in
his
case
;
and
it
is
singularity
which
often
makes
the
worst
part
of
our
suffering
,
as
it
always
does
of
our
conduct
.
I
have
great
hope
of
prevailing
.
We
must
be
serious
and
decided
;
for
after
all
,
the
person
who
has
contracted
debts
must
pay
them
;
and
though
a
great
deal
is
due
to
the
feelings
of
the
gentleman
,
and
the
head
of
a
house
,
like
your
father
,
there
is
still
more
due
to
the
character
of
an
honest
man
.
"
33
This
was
the
principle
on
which
Anne
wanted
her
father
to
be
proceeding
,
his
friends
to
be
urging
him
.
She
considered
it
as
an
act
of
indispensable
duty
to
clear
away
the
claims
of
creditors
with
all
the
expedition
which
the
most
comprehensive
retrenchments
could
secure
,
and
saw
no
dignity
in
anything
short
of
it
.
She
wanted
it
to
be
prescribed
,
and
felt
as
a
duty
.
She
rated
Lady
Russell
's
influence
highly
;
and
as
to
the
severe
degree
of
self-denial
which
her
own
conscience
prompted
,
she
believed
there
might
be
little
more
difficulty
in
persuading
them
to
a
complete
,
than
to
half
a
reformation
.
Отключить рекламу
34
Her
knowledge
of
her
father
and
Elizabeth
inclined
her
to
think
that
the
sacrifice
of
one
pair
of
horses
would
be
hardly
less
painful
than
of
both
,
and
so
on
,
through
the
whole
list
of
Lady
Russell
's
too
gentle
reductions
.
35
How
Anne
's
more
rigid
requisitions
might
have
been
taken
is
of
little
consequence
.
Lady
Russell
's
had
no
success
at
all
:
could
not
be
put
up
with
,
were
not
to
be
borne
.
"
What
!
every
comfort
of
life
knocked
off
!
Journeys
,
London
,
servants
,
horses
,
table
--
contractions
and
restrictions
every
where
!
To
live
no
longer
with
the
decencies
even
of
a
private
gentleman
!
No
,
he
would
sooner
quit
Kellynch
Hall
at
once
,
than
remain
in
it
on
such
disgraceful
terms
.
"
36
"
Quit
Kellynch
Hall
.
"
The
hint
was
immediately
taken
up
by
Mr
Shepherd
,
whose
interest
was
involved
in
the
reality
of
Sir
Walter
's
retrenching
,
and
who
was
perfectly
persuaded
that
nothing
would
be
done
without
a
change
of
abode
.
"
Since
the
idea
had
been
started
in
the
very
quarter
which
ought
to
dictate
,
he
had
no
scruple
,
"
he
said
,
"
in
confessing
his
judgement
to
be
entirely
on
that
side
.
It
did
not
appear
to
him
that
Sir
Walter
could
materially
alter
his
style
of
living
in
a
house
which
had
such
a
character
of
hospitality
and
ancient
dignity
to
support
.
In
any
other
place
Sir
Walter
might
judge
for
himself
;
and
would
be
looked
up
to
,
as
regulating
the
modes
of
life
in
whatever
way
he
might
choose
to
model
his
household
.
37
"
Отключить рекламу
38
Sir
Walter
would
quit
Kellynch
Hall
;
and
after
a
very
few
days
more
of
doubt
and
indecision
,
the
great
question
of
whither
he
should
go
was
settled
,
and
the
first
outline
of
this
important
change
made
out
.
39
There
had
been
three
alternatives
,
London
,
Bath
,
or
another
house
in
the
country
.
All
Anne
's
wishes
had
been
for
the
latter
.
A
small
house
in
their
own
neighbourhood
,
where
they
might
still
have
Lady
Russell
's
society
,
still
be
near
Mary
,
and
still
have
the
pleasure
of
sometimes
seeing
the
lawns
and
groves
of
Kellynch
,
was
the
object
of
her
ambition
.
But
the
usual
fate
of
Anne
attended
her
,
in
having
something
very
opposite
from
her
inclination
fixed
on
.
She
disliked
Bath
,
and
did
not
think
it
agreed
with
her
;
and
Bath
was
to
be
her
home
.
40
Sir
Walter
had
at
first
thought
more
of
London
;
but
Mr
Shepherd
felt
that
he
could
not
be
trusted
in
London
,
and
had
been
skilful
enough
to
dissuade
him
from
it
,
and
make
Bath
preferred
.
It
was
a
much
safer
place
for
a
gentleman
in
his
predicament
:
he
might
there
be
important
at
comparatively
little
expense
.
Two
material
advantages
of
Bath
over
London
had
of
course
been
given
all
their
weight
:
its
more
convenient
distance
from
Kellynch
,
only
fifty
miles
,
and
Lady
Russell
's
spending
some
part
of
every
winter
there
;
and
to
the
very
great
satisfaction
of
Lady
Russell
,
whose
first
views
on
the
projected
change
had
been
for
Bath
,
Sir
Walter
and
Elizabeth
were
induced
to
believe
that
they
should
lose
neither
consequence
nor
enjoyment
by
settling
there
.