[Mansfield Park by Jane Austen]@TWC D-Link bookMansfield Park CHAPTER XX 15/15
In _his_ departure Sir Thomas felt the chief interest: wanting to be alone with his family, the presence of a stranger superior to Mr.Yates must have been irksome; but of him, trifling and confident, idle and expensive, it was every way vexatious.
In himself he was wearisome, but as the friend of Tom and the admirer of Julia he became offensive.
Sir Thomas had been quite indifferent to Mr.Crawford's going or staying: but his good wishes for Mr.Yates's having a pleasant journey, as he walked with him to the hall-door, were given with genuine satisfaction.
Mr.Yates had staid to see the destruction of every theatrical preparation at Mansfield, the removal of everything appertaining to the play: he left the house in all the soberness of its general character; and Sir Thomas hoped, in seeing him out of it, to be rid of the worst object connected with the scheme, and the last that must be inevitably reminding him of its existence. Mrs.Norris contrived to remove one article from his sight that might have distressed him.
The curtain, over which she had presided with such talent and such success, went off with her to her cottage, where she happened to be particularly in want of green baize..
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