[Persuasion by Jane Austen]@TWC D-Link book
Persuasion

CHAPTER 21
46/48

She had good reason to believe that some property of her husband in the West Indies, which had been for many years under a sort of sequestration for the payment of its own incumbrances, might be recoverable by proper measures; and this property, though not large, would be enough to make her comparatively rich.

But there was nobody to stir in it.

Mr Elliot would do nothing, and she could do nothing herself, equally disabled from personal exertion by her state of bodily weakness, and from employing others by her want of money.

She had no natural connexions to assist her even with their counsel, and she could not afford to purchase the assistance of the law.

This was a cruel aggravation of actually straitened means.
To feel that she ought to be in better circumstances, that a little trouble in the right place might do it, and to fear that delay might be even weakening her claims, was hard to bear.
It was on this point that she had hoped to engage Anne's good offices with Mr Elliot.


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