[Mansfield Park by Jane Austen]@TWC D-Link book
Mansfield Park

CHAPTER XXXV
17/27

You are aware of my having no common interest in Crawford." Fanny was too well aware of it to have anything to say; and they walked on together some fifty yards in mutual silence and abstraction.

Edmund first began again-- "I was very much pleased by her manner of speaking of it yesterday, particularly pleased, because I had not depended upon her seeing everything in so just a light.

I knew she was very fond of you; but yet I was afraid of her not estimating your worth to her brother quite as it deserved, and of her regretting that he had not rather fixed on some woman of distinction or fortune.

I was afraid of the bias of those worldly maxims, which she has been too much used to hear.

But it was very different.


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