1 But now I must be satisfied about Miss Price.
2 No, my dear Miss Price, and for reasons good.
3 But Miss Price and Mr. Edmund Bertram, I dare say, would take their chance.
4 But I cannot be satisfied without Fanny Price, without making a small hole in Fanny Price's heart.
5 Mrs. Grant's shewing civility to Miss Price, to Lady Bertram's niece, could never want explanation.
6 Such were its immediate effects, and within a twelvemonth a more important advantage to Mrs. Price resulted from it.
7 To save herself from useless remonstrance, Mrs. Price never wrote to her family on the subject till actually married.
8 "I begin now to understand you all, except Miss Price," said Miss Crawford, as she was walking with the Mr. Bertrams.
9 Thornton Lacey was the name of his impending living, as Miss Crawford well knew; and her interest in a negotiation for William Price's knave increased.
10 By the end of eleven years, however, Mrs. Price could no longer afford to cherish pride or resentment, or to lose one connexion that might possibly assist her.
11 Fanny Price was at this time just ten years old, and though there might not be much in her first appearance to captivate, there was, at least, nothing to disgust her relations.
12 We were unlucky, Miss Price," he continued, in a lower tone, to avoid the possibility of being heard by Edmund, and not at all aware of her feelings, "we certainly were very unlucky.
13 The return of Henry Crawford, and the arrival of William Price, had much to do with it, but much was still owing to Sir Thomas's more than toleration of the neighbourly attempts at the Parsonage.
14 She will have a companion in Fanny Price, you know, so it will all do very well; and as for Edmund, as he is not here to speak for himself, I will answer for his being most happy to join the party.
15 But with William and Fanny Price it was still a sentiment in all its prime and freshness, wounded by no opposition of interest, cooled by no separate attachment, and feeling the influence of time and absence only in its increase.
16 Mrs. Price seemed rather surprised that a girl should be fixed on, when she had so many fine boys, but accepted the offer most thankfully, assuring them of her daughter's being a very well-disposed, good-humoured girl, and trusting they would never have cause to throw her off.
17 Mrs. Price, in her turn, was injured and angry; and an answer, which comprehended each sister in its bitterness, and bestowed such very disrespectful reflections on the pride of Sir Thomas as Mrs. Norris could not possibly keep to herself, put an end to all intercourse between them for a considerable period.
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