<h2><SPAN name="link2HCH0030" id="link2HCH0030"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXX</h2>
<p>Miss Crawford’s uneasiness was much lightened by this conversation, and
she walked home again in spirits which might have defied almost another week of
the same small party in the same bad weather, had they been put to the proof;
but as that very evening brought her brother down from London again in quite,
or more than quite, his usual cheerfulness, she had nothing farther to try her
own. His still refusing to tell her what he had gone for was but the promotion
of gaiety; a day before it might have irritated, but now it was a pleasant
joke—suspected only of concealing something planned as a pleasant
surprise to herself. And the next day <i>did</i> bring a surprise to her. Henry
had said he should just go and ask the Bertrams how they did, and be back in
ten minutes, but he was gone above an hour; and when his sister, who had been
waiting for him to walk with her in the garden, met him at last most
impatiently in the sweep, and cried out, “My dear Henry, where can you
have been all this time?” he had only to say that he had been sitting
with Lady Bertram and Fanny.</p>
<p>“Sitting with them an hour and a half!” exclaimed Mary.</p>
<p>But this was only the beginning of her surprise.</p>
<p>“Yes, Mary,” said he, drawing her arm within his, and walking along
the sweep as if not knowing where he was: “I could not get away sooner;
Fanny looked so lovely! I am quite determined, Mary. My mind is entirely made
up. Will it astonish you? No: you must be aware that I am quite determined to
marry Fanny Price.”</p>
<p>The surprise was now complete; for, in spite of whatever his consciousness
might suggest, a suspicion of his having any such views had never entered his
sister’s imagination; and she looked so truly the astonishment she felt,
that he was obliged to repeat what he had said, and more fully and more
solemnly. The conviction of his determination once admitted, it was not
unwelcome. There was even pleasure with the surprise. Mary was in a state of
mind to rejoice in a connexion with the Bertram family, and to be not
displeased with her brother’s marrying a little beneath him.</p>
<p>“Yes, Mary,” was Henry’s concluding assurance. “I am
fairly caught. You know with what idle designs I began; but this is the end of
them. I have, I flatter myself, made no inconsiderable progress in her
affections; but my own are entirely fixed.”</p>
<p>“Lucky, lucky girl!” cried Mary, as soon as she could speak;
“what a match for her! My dearest Henry, this must be my <i>first</i>
feeling; but my <i>second</i>, which you shall have as sincerely, is, that I
approve your choice from my soul, and foresee your happiness as heartily as I
wish and desire it. You will have a sweet little wife; all gratitude and
devotion. Exactly what you deserve. What an amazing match for her! Mrs. Norris
often talks of her luck; what will she say now? The delight of all the family,
indeed! And she has some <i>true</i> friends in it! How <i>they</i> will
rejoice! But tell me all about it! Talk to me for ever. When did you begin to
think seriously about her?”</p>
<p>Nothing could be more impossible than to answer such a question, though nothing
could be more agreeable than to have it asked. “How the pleasing plague
had stolen on him” he could not say; and before he had expressed the same
sentiment with a little variation of words three times over, his sister eagerly
interrupted him with, “Ah, my dear Henry, and this is what took you to
London! This was your business! You chose to consult the Admiral before you
made up your mind.”</p>
<p>But this he stoutly denied. He knew his uncle too well to consult him on any
matrimonial scheme. The Admiral hated marriage, and thought it never pardonable
in a young man of independent fortune.</p>
<p>“When Fanny is known to him,” continued Henry, “he will doat
on her. She is exactly the woman to do away every prejudice of such a man as
the Admiral, for she is exactly such a woman as he thinks does not exist in the
world. She is the very impossibility he would describe, if indeed he has now
delicacy of language enough to embody his own ideas. But till it is absolutely
settled—settled beyond all interference, he shall know nothing of the
matter. No, Mary, you are quite mistaken. You have not discovered my business
yet.”</p>
<p>“Well, well, I am satisfied. I know now to whom it must relate, and am in
no hurry for the rest. Fanny Price! wonderful, quite wonderful! That Mansfield
should have done so much for—that <i>you</i> should have found your fate
in Mansfield! But you are quite right; you could not have chosen better. There
is not a better girl in the world, and you do not want for fortune; and as to
her connexions, they are more than good. The Bertrams are undoubtedly some of
the first people in this country. She is niece to Sir Thomas Bertram; that will
be enough for the world. But go on, go on. Tell me more. What are your plans?
Does she know her own happiness?”</p>
<p>“No.”</p>
<p>“What are you waiting for?”</p>
<p>“For—for very little more than opportunity. Mary, she is not like
her cousins; but I think I shall not ask in vain.”</p>
<p>“Oh no! you cannot. Were you even less pleasing—supposing her not
to love you already (of which, however, I can have little doubt)—you
would be safe. The gentleness and gratitude of her disposition would secure her
all your own immediately. From my soul I do not think she would marry you
<i>without</i> love; that is, if there is a girl in the world capable of being
uninfluenced by ambition, I can suppose it her; but ask her to love you, and
she will never have the heart to refuse.”</p>
<p>As soon as her eagerness could rest in silence, he was as happy to tell as she
could be to listen; and a conversation followed almost as deeply interesting to
her as to himself, though he had in fact nothing to relate but his own
sensations, nothing to dwell on but Fanny’s charms. Fanny’s beauty
of face and figure, Fanny’s graces of manner and goodness of heart, were
the exhaustless theme. The gentleness, modesty, and sweetness of her character
were warmly expatiated on; that sweetness which makes so essential a part of
every woman’s worth in the judgment of man, that though he sometimes
loves where it is not, he can never believe it absent. Her temper he had good
reason to depend on and to praise. He had often seen it tried. Was there one of
the family, excepting Edmund, who had not in some way or other continually
exercised her patience and forbearance? Her affections were evidently strong.
To see her with her brother! What could more delightfully prove that the warmth
of her heart was equal to its gentleness? What could be more encouraging to a
man who had her love in view? Then, her understanding was beyond every
suspicion, quick and clear; and her manners were the mirror of her own modest
and elegant mind. Nor was this all. Henry Crawford had too much sense not to
feel the worth of good principles in a wife, though he was too little
accustomed to serious reflection to know them by their proper name; but when he
talked of her having such a steadiness and regularity of conduct, such a high
notion of honour, and such an observance of decorum as might warrant any man in
the fullest dependence on her faith and integrity, he expressed what was
inspired by the knowledge of her being well principled and religious.</p>
<p>“I could so wholly and absolutely confide in her,” said he;
“and <i>that</i> is what I want.”</p>
<p>Well might his sister, believing as she really did that his opinion of Fanny
Price was scarcely beyond her merits, rejoice in her prospects.</p>
<p>“The more I think of it,” she cried, “the more am I convinced
that you are doing quite right; and though I should never have selected Fanny
Price as the girl most likely to attach you, I am now persuaded she is the very
one to make you happy. Your wicked project upon her peace turns out a clever
thought indeed. You will both find your good in it.”</p>
<p>“It was bad, very bad in me against such a creature; but I did not know
her then; and she shall have no reason to lament the hour that first put it
into my head. I will make her very happy, Mary; happier than she has ever yet
been herself, or ever seen anybody else. I will not take her from
Northamptonshire. I shall let Everingham, and rent a place in this
neighbourhood; perhaps Stanwix Lodge. I shall let a seven years’ lease of
Everingham. I am sure of an excellent tenant at half a word. I could name three
people now, who would give me my own terms and thank me.”</p>
<p>“Ha!” cried Mary; “settle in Northamptonshire! That is
pleasant! Then we shall be all together.”</p>
<p>When she had spoken it, she recollected herself, and wished it unsaid; but
there was no need of confusion; for her brother saw her only as the supposed
inmate of Mansfield parsonage, and replied but to invite her in the kindest
manner to his own house, and to claim the best right in her.</p>
<p>“You must give us more than half your time,” said he. “I
cannot admit Mrs. Grant to have an equal claim with Fanny and myself, for we
shall both have a right in you. Fanny will be so truly your sister!”</p>
<p>Mary had only to be grateful and give general assurances; but she was now very
fully purposed to be the guest of neither brother nor sister many months
longer.</p>
<p>“You will divide your year between London and Northamptonshire?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“That’s right; and in London, of course, a house of your own: no
longer with the Admiral. My dearest Henry, the advantage to you of getting away
from the Admiral before your manners are hurt by the contagion of his, before
you have contracted any of his foolish opinions, or learned to sit over your
dinner as if it were the best blessing of life! <i>You</i> are not sensible of
the gain, for your regard for him has blinded you; but, in my estimation, your
marrying early may be the saving of you. To have seen you grow like the Admiral
in word or deed, look or gesture, would have broken my heart.”</p>
<p>“Well, well, we do not think quite alike here. The Admiral has his
faults, but he is a very good man, and has been more than a father to me. Few
fathers would have let me have my own way half so much. You must not prejudice
Fanny against him. I must have them love one another.”</p>
<p>Mary refrained from saying what she felt, that there could not be two persons
in existence whose characters and manners were less accordant: time would
discover it to him; but she could not help <i>this</i> reflection on the
Admiral. “Henry, I think so highly of Fanny Price, that if I could
suppose the next Mrs. Crawford would have half the reason which my poor
ill-used aunt had to abhor the very name, I would prevent the marriage, if
possible; but I know you: I know that a wife you <i>loved</i> would be the
happiest of women, and that even when you ceased to love, she would yet find in
you the liberality and good-breeding of a gentleman.”</p>
<p>The impossibility of not doing everything in the world to make Fanny Price
happy, or of ceasing to love Fanny Price, was of course the groundwork of his
eloquent answer.</p>
<p>“Had you seen her this morning, Mary,” he continued,
“attending with such ineffable sweetness and patience to all the demands
of her aunt’s stupidity, working with her, and for her, her colour
beautifully heightened as she leant over the work, then returning to her seat
to finish a note which she was previously engaged in writing for that stupid
woman’s service, and all this with such unpretending gentleness, so much
as if it were a matter of course that she was not to have a moment at her own
command, her hair arranged as neatly as it always is, and one little curl
falling forward as she wrote, which she now and then shook back, and in the
midst of all this, still speaking at intervals to <i>me</i>, or listening, and
as if she liked to listen, to what I said. Had you seen her so, Mary, you would
not have implied the possibility of her power over my heart ever
ceasing.”</p>
<p>“My dearest Henry,” cried Mary, stopping short, and smiling in his
face, “how glad I am to see you so much in love! It quite delights me.
But what will Mrs. Rushworth and Julia say?”</p>
<p>“I care neither what they say nor what they feel. They will now see what
sort of woman it is that can attach me, that can attach a man of sense. I wish
the discovery may do them any good. And they will now see their cousin treated
as she ought to be, and I wish they may be heartily ashamed of their own
abominable neglect and unkindness. They will be angry,” he added, after a
moment’s silence, and in a cooler tone; “Mrs. Rushworth will be
very angry. It will be a bitter pill to her; that is, like other bitter pills,
it will have two moments’ ill flavour, and then be swallowed and
forgotten; for I am not such a coxcomb as to suppose her feelings more lasting
than other women’s, though <i>I</i> was the object of them. Yes, Mary, my
Fanny will feel a difference indeed: a daily, hourly difference, in the
behaviour of every being who approaches her; and it will be the completion of
my happiness to know that I am the doer of it, that I am the person to give the
consequence so justly her due. Now she is dependent, helpless, friendless,
neglected, forgotten.”</p>
<p>“Nay, Henry, not by all; not forgotten by all; not friendless or
forgotten. Her cousin Edmund never forgets her.”</p>
<p>“Edmund! True, I believe he is, generally speaking, kind to her, and so
is Sir Thomas in his way; but it is the way of a rich, superior, long-worded,
arbitrary uncle. What can Sir Thomas and Edmund together do, what <i>do</i>
they do for her happiness, comfort, honour, and dignity in the world, to what I
<i>shall</i> do?”</p>
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