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"
He
is
a
man
,
"
said
Lady
Russell
,
"
whom
I
have
no
wish
to
see
.
His
declining
to
be
on
cordial
terms
with
the
head
of
his
family
,
has
left
a
very
strong
impression
in
his
disfavour
with
me
.
"
This
decision
checked
Mary
's
eagerness
,
and
stopped
her
short
in
the
midst
of
the
Elliot
countenance
.
With
regard
to
Captain
Wentworth
,
though
Anne
hazarded
no
enquiries
,
there
was
voluntary
communication
sufficient
.
His
spirits
had
been
greatly
recovering
lately
as
might
be
expected
.
As
Louisa
improved
,
he
had
improved
,
and
he
was
now
quite
a
different
creature
from
what
he
had
been
the
first
week
.
He
had
not
seen
Louisa
;
and
was
so
extremely
fearful
of
any
ill
consequence
to
her
from
an
interview
,
that
he
did
not
press
for
it
at
all
;
and
,
on
the
contrary
,
seemed
to
have
a
plan
of
going
away
for
a
week
or
ten
days
,
till
her
head
was
stronger
.
He
had
talked
of
going
down
to
Plymouth
for
a
week
,
and
wanted
to
persuade
Captain
Benwick
to
go
with
him
;
but
,
as
Charles
maintained
to
the
last
,
Captain
Benwick
seemed
much
more
disposed
to
ride
over
to
Kellynch
.
There
can
be
no
doubt
that
Lady
Russell
and
Anne
were
both
occasionally
thinking
of
Captain
Benwick
,
from
this
time
.
Lady
Russell
could
not
hear
the
door-bell
without
feeling
that
it
might
be
his
herald
;
nor
could
Anne
return
from
any
stroll
of
solitary
indulgence
in
her
father
's
grounds
,
or
any
visit
of
charity
in
the
village
,
without
wondering
whether
she
might
see
him
or
hear
of
him
.
Captain
Benwick
came
not
,
however
.
He
was
either
less
disposed
for
it
than
Charles
had
imagined
,
or
he
was
too
shy
;
and
after
giving
him
a
week
's
indulgence
,
Lady
Russell
determined
him
to
be
unworthy
of
the
interest
which
he
had
been
beginning
to
excite
.
The
Musgroves
came
back
to
receive
their
happy
boys
and
girls
from
school
,
bringing
with
them
Mrs
Harville
's
little
children
,
to
improve
the
noise
of
Uppercross
,
and
lessen
that
of
Lyme
.
Henrietta
remained
with
Louisa
;
but
all
the
rest
of
the
family
were
again
in
their
usual
quarters
.
Lady
Russell
and
Anne
paid
their
compliments
to
them
once
,
when
Anne
could
not
but
feel
that
Uppercross
was
already
quite
alive
again
.
Though
neither
Henrietta
,
nor
Louisa
,
nor
Charles
Hayter
,
nor
Captain
Wentworth
were
there
,
the
room
presented
as
strong
a
contrast
as
could
be
wished
to
the
last
state
she
had
seen
it
in
.
Immediately
surrounding
Mrs
Musgrove
were
the
little
Harvilles
,
whom
she
was
sedulously
guarding
from
the
tyranny
of
the
two
children
from
the
Cottage
,
expressly
arrived
to
amuse
them
.
On
one
side
was
a
table
occupied
by
some
chattering
girls
,
cutting
up
silk
and
gold
paper
;
and
on
the
other
were
tressels
and
trays
,
bending
under
the
weight
of
brawn
and
cold
pies
,
where
riotous
boys
were
holding
high
revel
;
the
whole
completed
by
a
roaring
Christmas
fire
,
which
seemed
determined
to
be
heard
,
in
spite
of
all
the
noise
of
the
others
.
Charles
and
Mary
also
came
in
,
of
course
,
during
their
visit
,
and
Mr
Musgrove
made
a
point
of
paying
his
respects
to
Lady
Russell
,
and
sat
down
close
to
her
for
ten
minutes
,
talking
with
a
very
raised
voice
,
but
from
the
clamour
of
the
children
on
his
knees
,
generally
in
vain
.
It
was
a
fine
family-piece
.
Anne
,
judging
from
her
own
temperament
,
would
have
deemed
such
a
domestic
hurricane
a
bad
restorative
of
the
nerves
,
which
Louisa
's
illness
must
have
so
greatly
shaken
.
But
Mrs
Musgrove
,
who
got
Anne
near
her
on
purpose
to
thank
her
most
cordially
,
again
and
again
,
for
all
her
attentions
to
them
,
concluded
a
short
recapitulation
of
what
she
had
suffered
herself
by
observing
,
with
a
happy
glance
round
the
room
,
that
after
all
she
had
gone
through
,
nothing
was
so
likely
to
do
her
good
as
a
little
quiet
cheerfulness
at
home
.