| 11111 |
 This
friend,
and Sir Walter, did not marry, whatever
might have been anticipated on that head
by their acquaintance. Thirteen years
had passed away since Lady Elliot's
death, and they were still near
neighbours and intimate friends, and one
remained a widower, the other a widow.
That Lady Russell, of steady age and
character, and extremely well provided
for, should have no thought of a second
marriage, needs no apology to the
public, which is rather apt to be
unreasonably discontented when a woman
does marry again, than when she does
not; but Sir Walter's continuing in
singleness requires explanation. Be it
known then, that Sir Walter, like a good
father, (having met with one or two
private disappointments in very
unreasonable applications), prided
himself on remaining single for his dear
daughters' sake. For one daughter, his
eldest, he would really have given up
any thing, which he had not been very
much tempted to do. Elizabeth had
succeeded, at sixteen, to all that was
possible, of her mother's rights and
consequence; and being very handsome,
and very like himself, her influence had
always been great, and they had gone on
together most happily. His two other
children were of very inferior value.
Mary had acquired a little artificial
importance, by becoming Mrs Charles
Musgrove; but Anne, with an elegance of
mind and sweetness of character, which
must have placed her high with any
people of real understanding, was nobody
with either father or sister; her word
had no weight, her convenience was
always to give way-- she was only Anne.
To Lady Russell, indeed, she was a
most dear and highly valued
god-daughter, favourite, and friend.
Lady Russell loved them all; but it was
only in Anne that she could fancy the
mother to revive again.
A few years before, Anne Elliot had
been a very pretty girl, but her bloom
had vanished early; and as even in its
height, her father had found little to
admire in her, (so totally different
were her delicate features and mild dark
eyes from his own), there could be
nothing in them, now that she was faded
and thin, to excite his esteem. He had
never indulged much hope, he had now
none, of ever reading her name in any
other page of his favourite work. All
equality of alliance must rest with
Elizabeth, for Mary had merely connected
herself with an old country family of
respectability and large fortune, and
had therefore given all the honour and
received none: Elizabeth would, one day
or other, marry suitably.
It sometimes happens that a woman is
handsomer at twenty-nine than she was
ten years before; and, generally
speaking, if there has been neither ill
health nor anxiety, it is a time of life
at which scarcely any charm is lost. It
was so with Elizabeth, still the same
handsome Miss Elliot that she had begun
to be thirteen years ago, and Sir Walter
might be excused, therefore, in
forgetting her age, or, at least, be
deemed only half a fool, for thinking
himself and Elizabeth as blooming as
ever, amidst the wreck of the good looks
of everybody else; for he could plainly
see how old all the rest of his family
and acquaintance were growing. Anne
haggard, Mary coarse, every face in the
neighbourhood worsting, and the rapid
increase of the crow's foot about Lady
Russell's temples had long been a
distress to him.
Elizabeth did not quite equal her
father in personal contentment. Thirteen
years had seen her mistress of Kellynch
Hall, presiding and directing with a
self-possession and decision which could
never have given the idea of her being
younger than she was. For thirteen years
had she been doing the honours, and
laying down the domestic law at home,
and leading the way to the chaise and
four, and walking immediately after Lady
Russell out of all the drawing-rooms and
dining-rooms in the country. Thirteen
winters' revolving frosts had seen her
opening every ball of credit which a
scanty neighbourhood afforded, and
thirteen springs shewn their blossoms,
as she travelled up to London with her
father, for a few weeks' annual
enjoyment of the great world. She had
the remembrance of all this, she had the
consciousness of being nine-and-twenty
to give her some regrets and some
apprehensions; she was fully satisfied
of being still quite as handsome as
ever, but she felt her approach to the
years of danger, and would have rejoiced
to be certain of being properly
solicited by baronet-blood within the
next twelvemonth or two. Then might she
again take up the book of books with as
much enjoyment as in her early youth,
but now she liked it not. Always to be
presented with the date of her own birth
and see no marriage follow but that of a
youngest sister, made the book an evil;
and more than once, when her father had
left it open on the table near her, had
she closed it, with averted eyes, and
pushed it away.
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