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Lady
Russell
felt
obliged
to
oppose
her
dear
Anne
's
known
wishes
.
It
would
be
too
much
to
expect
Sir
Walter
to
descend
into
a
small
house
in
his
own
neighbourhood
.
Anne
herself
would
have
found
the
mortifications
of
it
more
than
she
foresaw
,
and
to
Sir
Walter
's
feelings
they
must
have
been
dreadful
.
And
with
regard
to
Anne
's
dislike
of
Bath
,
she
considered
it
as
a
prejudice
and
mistake
arising
,
first
,
from
the
circumstance
of
her
having
been
three
years
at
school
there
,
after
her
mother
's
death
;
and
secondly
,
from
her
happening
to
be
not
in
perfectly
good
spirits
the
only
winter
which
she
had
afterwards
spent
there
with
herself
.
Lady
Russell
was
fond
of
Bath
,
in
short
,
and
disposed
to
think
it
must
suit
them
all
;
and
as
to
her
young
friend
's
health
,
by
passing
all
the
warm
months
with
her
at
Kellynch
Lodge
,
every
danger
would
be
avoided
;
and
it
was
in
fact
,
a
change
which
must
do
both
health
and
spirits
good
.
Anne
had
been
too
little
from
home
,
too
little
seen
.
Her
spirits
were
not
high
.
A
larger
society
would
improve
them
.
She
wanted
her
to
be
more
known
.
The
undesirableness
of
any
other
house
in
the
same
neighbourhood
for
Sir
Walter
was
certainly
much
strengthened
by
one
part
,
and
a
very
material
part
of
the
scheme
,
which
had
been
happily
engrafted
on
the
beginning
.
He
was
not
only
to
quit
his
home
,
but
to
see
it
in
the
hands
of
others
;
a
trial
of
fortitude
,
which
stronger
heads
than
Sir
Walter
's
have
found
too
much
.
Kellynch
Hall
was
to
be
let
.
This
,
however
,
was
a
profound
secret
,
not
to
be
breathed
beyond
their
own
circle
.
Sir
Walter
could
not
have
borne
the
degradation
of
being
known
to
design
letting
his
house
.
Mr
Shepherd
had
once
mentioned
the
word
"
advertise
,
"
but
never
dared
approach
it
again
.
Sir
Walter
spurned
the
idea
of
its
being
offered
in
any
manner
;
forbad
the
slightest
hint
being
dropped
of
his
having
such
an
intention
;
and
it
was
only
on
the
supposition
of
his
being
spontaneously
solicited
by
some
most
unexceptionable
applicant
,
on
his
own
terms
,
and
as
a
great
favour
,
that
he
would
let
it
at
all
.
How
quick
come
the
reasons
for
approving
what
we
like
!
Lady
Russell
had
another
excellent
one
at
hand
,
for
being
extremely
glad
that
Sir
Walter
and
his
family
were
to
remove
from
the
country
.
Elizabeth
had
been
lately
forming
an
intimacy
,
which
she
wished
to
see
interrupted
.
It
was
with
the
daughter
of
Mr
Shepherd
,
who
had
returned
,
after
an
unprosperous
marriage
,
to
her
father
's
house
,
with
the
additional
burden
of
two
children
.
She
was
a
clever
young
woman
,
who
understood
the
art
of
pleasing
--
the
art
of
pleasing
,
at
least
,
at
Kellynch
Hall
;
and
who
had
made
herself
so
acceptable
to
Miss
Elliot
,
as
to
have
been
already
staying
there
more
than
once
,
in
spite
of
all
that
Lady
Russell
,
who
thought
it
a
friendship
quite
out
of
place
,
could
hint
of
caution
and
reserve
.
Lady
Russell
,
indeed
,
had
scarcely
any
influence
with
Elizabeth
,
and
seemed
to
love
her
,
rather
because
she
would
love
her
,
than
because
Elizabeth
deserved
it
.
She
had
never
received
from
her
more
than
outward
attention
,
nothing
beyond
the
observances
of
complaisance
;
had
never
succeeded
in
any
point
which
she
wanted
to
carry
,
against
previous
inclination
She
had
been
repeatedly
very
earnest
in
trying
to
get
Anne
included
in
the
visit
to
London
,
sensibly
open
to
all
the
injustice
and
all
the
discredit
of
the
selfish
arrangements
which
shut
her
out
,
and
on
many
lesser
occasions
had
endeavoured
to
give
Elizabeth
the
advantage
of
her
own
better
judgement
and
experience
;
but
always
in
vain
:
Elizabeth
would
go
her
own
way
;
and
never
had
she
pursued
it
in
more
decided
opposition
to
Lady
Russell
than
in
this
selection
of
Mrs
Clay
;
turning
from
the
society
of
so
deserving
a
sister
,
to
bestow
her
affection
and
confidence
on
one
who
ought
to
have
been
nothing
to
her
but
the
object
of
distant
civility
.
From
situation
,
Mrs
Clay
was
,
in
Lady
Russell
's
estimate
,
a
very
unequal
,
and
in
her
character
she
believed
a
very
dangerous
companion
;
and
a
removal
that
would
leave
Mrs
Clay
behind
,
and
bring
a
choice
of
more
suitable
intimates
within
Miss
Elliot
's
reach
,
was
therefore
an
object
of
first-rate
importance
.