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"
There
!
you
see
!
"
cried
Mary
in
an
ecstasy
,
"
just
as
I
said
!
Heir
to
Sir
Walter
Elliot
!
I
was
sure
that
would
come
out
,
if
it
was
so
.
Depend
upon
it
,
that
is
a
circumstance
which
his
servants
take
care
to
publish
,
wherever
he
goes
.
But
,
Anne
,
only
conceive
how
extraordinary
!
I
wish
I
had
looked
at
him
more
.
I
wish
we
had
been
aware
in
time
,
who
it
was
,
that
he
might
have
been
introduced
to
us
.
What
a
pity
that
we
should
not
have
been
introduced
to
each
other
!
Do
you
think
he
had
the
Elliot
countenance
?
I
hardly
looked
at
him
,
I
was
looking
at
the
horses
;
but
I
think
he
had
something
of
the
Elliot
countenance
,
I
wonder
the
arms
did
not
strike
me
!
Oh
!
the
great-coat
was
hanging
over
the
panel
,
and
hid
the
arms
,
so
it
did
;
otherwise
,
I
am
sure
,
I
should
have
observed
them
,
and
the
livery
too
;
if
the
servant
had
not
been
in
mourning
,
one
should
have
known
him
by
the
livery
.
"
"
Putting
all
these
very
extraordinary
circumstances
together
,
"
said
Captain
Wentworth
,
"
we
must
consider
it
to
be
the
arrangement
of
Providence
,
that
you
should
not
be
introduced
to
your
cousin
.
"
When
she
could
command
Mary
's
attention
,
Anne
quietly
tried
to
convince
her
that
their
father
and
Mr
Elliot
had
not
,
for
many
years
,
been
on
such
terms
as
to
make
the
power
of
attempting
an
introduction
at
all
desirable
.
At
the
same
time
,
however
,
it
was
a
secret
gratification
to
herself
to
have
seen
her
cousin
,
and
to
know
that
the
future
owner
of
Kellynch
was
undoubtedly
a
gentleman
,
and
had
an
air
of
good
sense
.
She
would
not
,
upon
any
account
,
mention
her
having
met
with
him
the
second
time
;
luckily
Mary
did
not
much
attend
to
their
having
passed
close
by
him
in
their
earlier
walk
,
but
she
would
have
felt
quite
ill-used
by
Anne
's
having
actually
run
against
him
in
the
passage
,
and
received
his
very
polite
excuses
,
while
she
had
never
been
near
him
at
all
;
no
,
that
cousinly
little
interview
must
remain
a
perfect
secret
.
"
Of
course
,
"
said
Mary
,
"
you
will
mention
our
seeing
Mr
Elliot
,
the
next
time
you
write
to
Bath
.
I
think
my
father
certainly
ought
to
hear
of
it
;
do
mention
all
about
him
.
"
Anne
avoided
a
direct
reply
,
but
it
was
just
the
circumstance
which
she
considered
as
not
merely
unnecessary
to
be
communicated
,
but
as
what
ought
to
be
suppressed
.
The
offence
which
had
been
given
her
father
,
many
years
back
,
she
knew
;
Elizabeth
's
particular
share
in
it
she
suspected
;
and
that
Mr
Elliot
's
idea
always
produced
irritation
in
both
was
beyond
a
doubt
.
Mary
never
wrote
to
Bath
herself
;
all
the
toil
of
keeping
up
a
slow
and
unsatisfactory
correspondence
with
Elizabeth
fell
on
Anne
.
Breakfast
had
not
been
long
over
,
when
they
were
joined
by
Captain
and
Mrs
Harville
and
Captain
Benwick
;
with
whom
they
had
appointed
to
take
their
last
walk
about
Lyme
.
They
ought
to
be
setting
off
for
Uppercross
by
one
,
and
in
the
mean
while
were
to
be
all
together
,
and
out
of
doors
as
long
as
they
could
.
Anne
found
Captain
Benwick
getting
near
her
,
as
soon
as
they
were
all
fairly
in
the
street
.
Their
conversation
the
preceding
evening
did
not
disincline
him
to
seek
her
again
;
and
they
walked
together
some
time
,
talking
as
before
of
Mr
Scott
and
Lord
Byron
,
and
still
as
unable
as
before
,
and
as
unable
as
any
other
two
readers
,
to
think
exactly
alike
of
the
merits
of
either
,
till
something
occasioned
an
almost
general
change
amongst
their
party
,
and
instead
of
Captain
Benwick
,
she
had
Captain
Harville
by
her
side
.