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

CHAPTER XLV
4/18

Tom's amendment was alarmingly slow.
Easter came particularly late this year, as Fanny had most sorrowfully considered, on first learning that she had no chance of leaving Portsmouth till after it.

It came, and she had yet heard nothing of her return--nothing even of the going to London, which was to precede her return.

Her aunt often expressed a wish for her, but there was no notice, no message from the uncle on whom all depended.

She supposed he could not yet leave his son, but it was a cruel, a terrible delay to her.

The end of April was coming on; it would soon be almost three months, instead of two, that she had been absent from them all, and that her days had been passing in a state of penance, which she loved them too well to hope they would thoroughly understand; and who could yet say when there might be leisure to think of or fetch her?
Her eagerness, her impatience, her longings to be with them, were such as to bring a line or two of Cowper's Tirocinium for ever before her.
"With what intense desire she wants her home," was continually on her tongue, as the truest description of a yearning which she could not suppose any schoolboy's bosom to feel more keenly.
When she had been coming to Portsmouth, she had loved to call it her home, had been fond of saying that she was going home; the word had been very dear to her, and so it still was, but it must be applied to Mansfield.


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