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411
"
I
do
not
exactly
know
,
for
Henrietta
and
I
were
at
school
at
the
time
;
but
I
believe
about
a
year
before
he
married
Mary
.
I
wish
she
had
accepted
him
.
We
should
all
have
liked
her
a
great
deal
better
;
and
papa
and
mamma
always
think
it
was
her
great
friend
Lady
Russell
's
doing
,
that
she
did
not
.
They
think
Charles
might
not
be
learned
and
bookish
enough
to
please
Lady
Russell
,
and
that
therefore
,
she
persuaded
Anne
to
refuse
him
.
"
412
The
sounds
were
retreating
,
and
Anne
distinguished
no
more
.
Her
own
emotions
still
kept
her
fixed
.
She
had
much
to
recover
from
,
before
she
could
move
.
The
listener
's
proverbial
fate
was
not
absolutely
hers
;
she
had
heard
no
evil
of
herself
,
but
she
had
heard
a
great
deal
of
very
painful
import
.
She
saw
how
her
own
character
was
considered
by
Captain
Wentworth
,
and
there
had
been
just
that
degree
of
feeling
and
curiosity
about
her
in
his
manner
which
must
give
her
extreme
agitation
.
413
As
soon
as
she
could
,
she
went
after
Mary
,
and
having
found
,
and
walked
back
with
her
to
their
former
station
,
by
the
stile
,
felt
some
comfort
in
their
whole
party
being
immediately
afterwards
collected
,
and
once
more
in
motion
together
.
Her
spirits
wanted
the
solitude
and
silence
which
only
numbers
could
give
.
Отключить рекламу
414
Charles
and
Henrietta
returned
,
bringing
,
as
may
be
conjectured
,
Charles
Hayter
with
them
.
The
minutiae
of
the
business
Anne
could
not
attempt
to
understand
;
even
Captain
Wentworth
did
not
seem
admitted
to
perfect
confidence
here
;
but
that
there
had
been
a
withdrawing
on
the
gentleman
's
side
,
and
a
relenting
on
the
lady
's
,
and
that
they
were
now
very
glad
to
be
together
again
,
did
not
admit
a
doubt
.
Henrietta
looked
a
little
ashamed
,
but
very
well
pleased
--
Charles
Hayter
exceedingly
happy
:
and
they
were
devoted
to
each
other
almost
from
the
first
instant
of
their
all
setting
forward
for
Uppercross
.
415
Everything
now
marked
out
Louisa
for
Captain
Wentworth
;
nothing
could
be
plainer
;
and
where
many
divisions
were
necessary
,
or
even
where
they
were
not
,
they
walked
side
by
side
nearly
as
much
as
the
other
two
.
In
a
long
strip
of
meadow
land
,
where
there
was
ample
space
for
all
,
they
were
thus
divided
,
forming
three
distinct
parties
;
and
to
that
party
of
the
three
which
boasted
least
animation
,
and
least
complaisance
,
Anne
necessarily
belonged
.
She
joined
Charles
and
Mary
,
and
was
tired
enough
to
be
very
glad
of
Charles
's
other
arm
;
but
Charles
,
though
in
very
good
humour
with
her
,
was
out
of
temper
with
his
wife
.
416
Mary
had
shewn
herself
disobliging
to
him
,
and
was
now
to
reap
the
consequence
,
which
consequence
was
his
dropping
her
arm
almost
every
moment
to
cut
off
the
heads
of
some
nettles
in
the
hedge
with
his
switch
;
and
when
Mary
began
to
complain
of
it
,
and
lament
her
being
ill-used
,
according
to
custom
,
in
being
on
the
hedge
side
,
while
Anne
was
never
incommoded
on
the
other
,
he
dropped
the
arms
of
both
to
hunt
after
a
weasel
which
he
had
a
momentary
glance
of
,
and
they
could
hardly
get
him
along
at
all
.
417
This
long
meadow
bordered
a
lane
,
which
their
footpath
,
at
the
end
of
it
was
to
cross
,
and
when
the
party
had
all
reached
the
gate
of
exit
,
the
carriage
advancing
in
the
same
direction
,
which
had
been
some
time
heard
,
was
just
coming
up
,
and
proved
to
be
Admiral
Croft
's
gig
.
He
and
his
wife
had
taken
their
intended
drive
,
and
were
returning
home
.
Upon
hearing
how
long
a
walk
the
young
people
had
engaged
in
,
they
kindly
offered
a
seat
to
any
lady
who
might
be
particularly
tired
;
it
would
save
her
a
full
mile
,
and
they
were
going
through
Uppercross
.
The
invitation
was
general
,
and
generally
declined
.
The
Miss
Musgroves
were
not
at
all
tired
,
and
Mary
was
either
offended
,
by
not
being
asked
before
any
of
the
others
,
or
what
Louisa
called
the
Elliot
pride
could
not
endure
to
make
a
third
in
a
one
horse
chaise
.
Отключить рекламу
418
The
walking
party
had
crossed
the
lane
,
and
were
surmounting
an
opposite
stile
,
and
the
Admiral
was
putting
his
horse
in
motion
again
,
when
Captain
Wentworth
cleared
the
hedge
in
a
moment
to
say
something
to
his
sister
.
The
something
might
be
guessed
by
its
effects
.
419
"
Miss
Elliot
,
I
am
sure
you
are
tired
,
"
cried
Mrs
Croft
.
"
Do
let
us
have
the
pleasure
of
taking
you
home
.
Here
is
excellent
room
for
three
,
I
assure
you
.
If
we
were
all
like
you
,
I
believe
we
might
sit
four
.
You
must
,
indeed
,
you
must
.
"
420
Anne
was
still
in
the
lane
;
and
though
instinctively
beginning
to
decline
,
she
was
not
allowed
to
proceed
.
The
Admiral
's
kind
urgency
came
in
support
of
his
wife
's
;
they
would
not
be
refused
;
they
compressed
themselves
into
the
smallest
possible
space
to
leave
her
a
corner
,
and
Captain
Wentworth
,
without
saying
a
word
,
turned
to
her
,
and
quietly
obliged
her
to
be
assisted
into
the
carriage
.