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"
"
Yes
,
"
sighed
Anne
,
"
we
shall
,
indeed
,
be
known
to
be
related
to
them
!
"
then
recollecting
herself
,
and
not
wishing
to
be
answered
,
she
added
,
"
I
certainly
do
think
there
has
been
by
far
too
much
trouble
taken
to
procure
the
acquaintance
.
I
suppose
"
(
smiling
)
"
I
have
more
pride
than
any
of
you
;
but
I
confess
it
does
vex
me
,
that
we
should
be
so
solicitous
to
have
the
relationship
acknowledged
,
which
we
may
be
very
sure
is
a
matter
of
perfect
indifference
to
them
.
"
"
Pardon
me
,
dear
cousin
,
you
are
unjust
in
your
own
claims
.
In
London
,
perhaps
,
in
your
present
quiet
style
of
living
,
it
might
be
as
you
say
:
but
in
Bath
;
Sir
Walter
Elliot
and
his
family
will
always
be
worth
knowing
:
always
acceptable
as
acquaintance
.
"
"
Well
,
"
said
Anne
,
"
I
certainly
am
proud
,
too
proud
to
enjoy
a
welcome
which
depends
so
entirely
upon
place
.
"
"
I
love
your
indignation
,
"
said
he
;
"
it
is
very
natural
.
But
here
you
are
in
Bath
,
and
the
object
is
to
be
established
here
with
all
the
credit
and
dignity
which
ought
to
belong
to
Sir
Walter
Elliot
.
You
talk
of
being
proud
;
I
am
called
proud
,
I
know
,
and
I
shall
not
wish
to
believe
myself
otherwise
;
for
our
pride
,
if
investigated
,
would
have
the
same
object
,
I
have
no
doubt
,
though
the
kind
may
seem
a
little
different
.
In
one
point
,
I
am
sure
,
my
dear
cousin
,
"
(
he
continued
,
speaking
lower
,
though
there
was
no
one
else
in
the
room
)
"
in
one
point
,
I
am
sure
,
we
must
feel
alike
We
must
feel
that
every
addition
to
your
father
's
society
,
among
his
equals
or
superiors
,
may
be
of
use
in
diverting
his
thoughts
from
those
who
are
beneath
him
.
"
He
looked
,
as
he
spoke
,
to
the
seat
which
Mrs
Clay
had
been
lately
occupying
:
a
sufficient
explanation
of
what
he
particularly
meant
;
and
though
Anne
could
not
believe
in
their
having
the
same
sort
of
pride
,
she
was
pleased
with
him
for
not
liking
Mrs
Clay
;
and
her
conscience
admitted
that
his
wishing
to
promote
her
father
's
getting
great
acquaintance
was
more
than
excusable
in
the
view
of
defeating
her
.
While
Sir
Walter
and
Elizabeth
were
assiduously
pushing
their
good
fortune
in
Laura
Place
,
Anne
was
renewing
an
acquaintance
of
a
very
different
description
.
She
had
called
on
her
former
governess
,
and
had
heard
from
her
of
there
being
an
old
school-fellow
in
Bath
,
who
had
the
two
strong
claims
on
her
attention
of
past
kindness
and
present
suffering
.
Miss
Hamilton
,
now
Mrs
Smith
,
had
shewn
her
kindness
in
one
of
those
periods
of
her
life
when
it
had
been
most
valuable
.
Anne
had
gone
unhappy
to
school
,
grieving
for
the
loss
of
a
mother
whom
she
had
dearly
loved
,
feeling
her
separation
from
home
,
and
suffering
as
a
girl
of
fourteen
,
of
strong
sensibility
and
not
high
spirits
,
must
suffer
at
such
a
time
;
and
Miss
Hamilton
,
three
years
older
than
herself
,
but
still
from
the
want
of
near
relations
and
a
settled
home
,
remaining
another
year
at
school
,
had
been
useful
and
good
to
her
in
a
way
which
had
considerably
lessened
her
misery
,
and
could
never
be
remembered
with
indifference
.
Miss
Hamilton
had
left
school
,
had
married
not
long
afterwards
,
was
said
to
have
married
a
man
of
fortune
,
and
this
was
all
that
Anne
had
known
of
her
,
till
now
that
their
governess
's
account
brought
her
situation
forward
in
a
more
decided
but
very
different
form
.