The young people were pleased with
each other from the first. On each side there
was much to attract, and their acquaintance soon promised
as early an intimacy as good manners would warrant.
Miss Crawford’s beauty did her no disservice
with the Miss Bertrams. They were too handsome
themselves to dislike any woman for being so too,
and were almost as much charmed as their brothers
with her lively dark eye, clear brown complexion,
and general prettiness. Had she been tall, full
formed, and fair, it might have been more of a trial:
but as it was, there could be no comparison; and
she was most allowably a sweet, pretty girl, while
they were the finest young women in the country.
Her brother was not handsome:
no, when they first saw him he was absolutely plain,
black and plain; but still he was the gentleman, with
a pleasing address. The second meeting proved
him not so very plain: he was plain, to be sure,
but then he had so much countenance, and his teeth
were so good, and he was so well made, that one soon
forgot he was plain; and after a third interview,
after dining in company with him at the Parsonage,
he was no longer allowed to be called so by anybody.
He was, in fact, the most agreeable young man the sisters
had ever known, and they were equally delighted with
him. Miss Bertram’s engagement made him
in equity the property of Julia, of which Julia was
fully aware; and before he had been at Mansfield a
week, she was quite ready to be fallen in love with.
Maria’s notions on the subject
were more confused and indistinct. She did not
want to see or understand. “There could
be no harm in her liking an agreeable man—
everybody knew her situation—Mr. Crawford
must take care of himself.” Mr. Crawford
did not mean to be in any danger! the Miss Bertrams
were worth pleasing, and were ready to be pleased;
and he began with no object but of making them like
him. He did not want them to die of love; but
with sense and temper which ought to have made him
judge and feel better, he allowed himself great latitude
on such points.
“I like your Miss Bertrams exceedingly,
sister,” said he, as he returned from attending
them to their carriage after the said dinner visit;
“they are very elegant, agreeable girls.”
“So they are indeed, and I am
delighted to hear you say it. But you like Julia
best.”
“Oh yes! I like Julia best.”
“But do you really? for Miss
Bertram is in general thought the handsomest.”
“So I should suppose.
She has the advantage in every feature, and I prefer
her countenance; but I like Julia best; Miss Bertram
is certainly the handsomest, and I have found her
the most agreeable, but I shall always like Julia best,
because you order me.”
“I shall not talk to you, Henry,
but I know you will like her best at last.”
“Do not I tell you that I like
her best at first?”
“And besides, Miss Bertram is
engaged. Remember that, my dear brother.
Her choice is made.”
“Yes, and I like her the better
for it. An engaged woman is always more agreeable
than a disengaged. She is satisfied with herself.
Her cares are over, and she feels that she may exert
all her powers of pleasing without suspicion.
All is safe with a lady engaged: no harm can
be done.”
“Why, as to that, Mr. Rushworth
is a very good sort of young man, and it is a great
match for her.”
“But Miss Bertram does not care
three straws for him; that is your opinion
of your intimate friend. I do not subscribe
to it. I am sure Miss Bertram is very much attached
to Mr. Rushworth. I could see it in her eyes,
when he was mentioned. I think too well of Miss
Bertram to suppose she would ever give her hand without
her heart.”
“Mary, how shall we manage him?”
“We must leave him to himself,
I believe. Talking does no good. He will
be taken in at last.”
“But I would not have him taken
in; I would not have him duped; I would have
it all fair and honourable.”
“Oh dear! let him stand his
chance and be taken in. It will do just as well.
Everybody is taken in at some period or other.”
“Not always in marriage, dear Mary.”
“In marriage especially.
With all due respect to such of the present company
as chance to be married, my dear Mrs. Grant, there
is not one in a hundred of either sex who is not taken
in when they marry. Look where I will, I see
that it is so; and I feel that it must
be so, when I consider that it is, of all transactions,
the one in which people expect most from others, and
are least honest themselves.”
“Ah! You have been in
a bad school for matrimony, in Hill Street.”
“My poor aunt had certainly
little cause to love the state; but, however, speaking
from my own observation, it is a manoeuvring business.
I know so many who have married in the full expectation
and confidence of some one particular advantage in
the connexion, or accomplishment, or good quality
in the person, who have found themselves entirely
deceived, and been obliged to put up with exactly
the reverse. What is this but a take in?”
“My dear child, there must be
a little imagination here. I beg your pardon,
but I cannot quite believe you. Depend upon it,
you see but half. You see the evil, but you
do not see the consolation. There will be little
rubs and disappointments everywhere, and we are all
apt to expect too much; but then, if one scheme of
happiness fails, human nature turns to another; if
the first calculation is wrong, we make a second better:
we find comfort somewhere—and those evil-minded
observers, dearest Mary, who make much of a little,
are more taken in and deceived than the parties themselves.”
“Well done, sister! I
honour your esprit du corps.
When I am a wife, I mean to be just as staunch myself;
and I wish my friends in general would be so too.
It would save me many a heartache.”
“You are as bad as your brother,
Mary; but we will cure you both. Mansfield shall
cure you both, and without any taking in. Stay
with us, and we will cure you.”
The Crawfords, without wanting to
be cured, were very willing to stay. Mary was
satisfied with the Parsonage as a present home, and
Henry equally ready to lengthen his visit. He
had come, intending to spend only a few days with
them; but Mansfield promised well, and there was nothing
to call him elsewhere. It delighted Mrs. Grant
to keep them both with her, and Dr. Grant was exceedingly
well contented to have it so: a talking pretty
young woman like Miss Crawford is always pleasant
society to an indolent, stay-at-home man; and Mr.
Crawford’s being his guest was an excuse for
drinking claret every day.
The Miss Bertrams’ admiration
of Mr. Crawford was more rapturous than anything which
Miss Crawford’s habits made her likely to feel.
She acknowledged, however, that the Mr. Bertrams
were very fine young men, that two such young men
were not often seen together even in London, and that
their manners, particularly those of the eldest, were
very good. He had been much in London, and
had more liveliness and gallantry than Edmund, and
must, therefore, be preferred; and, indeed, his being
the eldest was another strong claim. She had
felt an early presentiment that she should
like the eldest best. She knew it was her way.
Tom Bertram must have been thought
pleasant, indeed, at any rate; he was the sort of
young man to be generally liked, his agreeableness
was of the kind to be oftener found agreeable than
some endowments of a higher stamp, for he had easy
manners, excellent spirits, a large acquaintance,
and a great deal to say; and the reversion of Mansfield
Park, and a baronetcy, did no harm to all this.
Miss Crawford soon felt that he and his situation
might do. She looked about her with due consideration,
and found almost everything in his favour: a
park, a real park, five miles round, a spacious modern-built
house, so well placed and well screened as to deserve
to be in any collection of engravings of gentlemen’s
seats in the kingdom, and wanting only to be completely
new furnished—pleasant sisters, a quiet
mother, and an agreeable man himself—with
the advantage of being tied up from much gaming at
present by a promise to his father, and of being Sir
Thomas hereafter. It might do very well; she
believed she should accept him; and she began accordingly
to interest herself a little about the horse which
he had to run at the B-——races.
These races were to call him away
not long after their acquaintance began; and as it
appeared that the family did not, from his usual goings
on, expect him back again for many weeks, it would
bring his passion to an early proof. Much was
said on his side to induce her to attend the races,
and schemes were made for a large party to them, with
all the eagerness of inclination, but it would only
do to be talked of.
And Fanny, what was she doing
and thinking all this while? and what was her
opinion of the newcomers? Few young ladies of
eighteen could be less called on to speak their opinion
than Fanny. In a quiet way, very little attended
to, she paid her tribute of admiration to Miss Crawford’s
beauty; but as she still continued to think Mr. Crawford
very plain, in spite of her two cousins having repeatedly
proved the contrary, she never mentioned him.
The notice, which she excited herself, was to this
effect. “I begin now to understand you
all, except Miss Price,” said Miss Crawford,
as she was walking with the Mr. Bertrams. “Pray,
is she out, or is she not? I am puzzled.
She dined at the Parsonage, with the rest of you,
which seemed like being out; and yet she says
so little, that I can hardly suppose she is.”
Edmund, to whom this was chiefly addressed,
replied, “I believe I know what you mean, but
I will not undertake to answer the question.
My cousin is grown up. She has the age and
sense of a woman, but the outs and not outs are beyond
me.”
“And yet, in general, nothing
can be more easily ascertained. The distinction
is so broad. Manners as well as appearance are,
generally speaking, so totally different. Till
now, I could not have supposed it possible to be mistaken
as to a girl’s being out or not. A girl
not out has always the same sort of dress: a
close bonnet, for instance; looks very demure, and
never says a word. You may smile, but it is so,
I assure you; and except that it is sometimes carried
a little too far, it is all very proper. Girls
should be quiet and modest. The most objectionable
part is, that the alteration of manners on being introduced
into company is frequently too sudden. They
sometimes pass in such very little time from reserve
to quite the opposite—to confidence! That
is the faulty part of the present system. One
does not like to see a girl of eighteen or nineteen
so immediately up to every thing—and perhaps
when one has seen her hardly able to speak the year
before. Mr. Bertram, I dare say you have
sometimes met with such changes.”
“I believe I have, but this
is hardly fair; I see what you are at. You are
quizzing me and Miss Anderson.”
“No, indeed. Miss Anderson!
I do not know who or what you mean. I am quite
in the dark. But I will quiz you with
a great deal of pleasure, if you will tell me what
about.”
“Ah! you carry it off very well,
but I cannot be quite so far imposed on. You
must have had Miss Anderson in your eye, in describing
an altered young lady. You paint too accurately
for mistake. It was exactly so. The Andersons
of Baker Street. We were speaking of them the
other day, you know. Edmund, you have heard me
mention Charles Anderson. The circumstance was
precisely as this lady has represented it. When
Anderson first introduced me to his family, about
two years ago, his sister was not out, and
I could not get her to speak to me. I sat there
an hour one morning waiting for Anderson, with only
her and a little girl or two in the room, the governess
being sick or run away, and the mother in and out
every moment with letters of business, and I could
hardly get a word or a look from the young lady—
nothing like a civil answer—she screwed
up her mouth, and turned from me with such an air!
I did not see her again for a twelvemonth.
She was then out. I met her at Mrs. Holford’s,
and did not recollect her. She came up to me,
claimed me as an acquaintance, stared me out of countenance;
and talked and laughed till I did not know which way
to look. I felt that I must be the jest of the
room at the time, and Miss Crawford, it is plain,
has heard the story.”
“And a very pretty story it
is, and with more truth in it, I dare say, than does
credit to Miss Anderson. It is too common a fault.
Mothers certainly have not yet got quite the right
way of managing their daughters. I do not know
where the error lies. I do not pretend to set
people right, but I do see that they are often wrong.”
“Those who are showing the world
what female manners should be,” said
Mr. Bertram gallantly, “are doing a great deal
to set them right.”
“The error is plain enough,”
said the less courteous Edmund; “such girls
are ill brought up. They are given wrong notions
from the beginning. They are always acting upon
motives of vanity, and there is no more real modesty
in their behaviour before they appear in public
than afterwards.”
“I do not know,” replied
Miss Crawford hesitatingly. “Yes, I cannot
agree with you there. It is certainly the modestest
part of the business. It is much worse to have
girls not out give themselves the same airs and take
the same liberties as if they were, which I have seen
done. That is worse than anything—quite
disgusting!”
“Yes, that is very inconvenient
indeed,” said Mr. Bertram. “It leads
one astray; one does not know what to do. The
close bonnet and demure air you describe so well (and
nothing was ever juster), tell one what is expected;
but I got into a dreadful scrape last year from the
want of them. I went down to Ramsgate for a
week with a friend last September, just after my return
from the West Indies. My friend Sneyd—you
have heard me speak of Sneyd, Edmund— his
father, and mother, and sisters, were there, all new
to me. When we reached Albion Place they were
out; we went after them, and found them on the pier:
Mrs. and the two Miss Sneyds, with others of their
acquaintance. I made my bow in form; and as Mrs.
Sneyd was surrounded by men, attached myself to one
of her daughters, walked by her side all the way home,
and made myself as agreeable as I could; the young
lady perfectly easy in her manners, and as ready to
talk as to listen. I had not a suspicion that
I could be doing anything wrong. They looked
just the same: both well-dressed, with veils
and parasols like other girls; but I afterwards found
that I had been giving all my attention to the youngest,
who was not out, and had most excessively offended
the eldest. Miss Augusta ought not to have been
noticed for the next six months; and Miss Sneyd, I
believe, has never forgiven me.”
“That was bad indeed.
Poor Miss Sneyd. Though I have no younger sister,
I feel for her. To be neglected before one’s
time must be very vexatious; but it was entirely the
mother’s fault. Miss Augusta should have
been with her governess. Such half-and-half
doings never prosper. But now I must be satisfied
about Miss Price. Does she go to balls?
Does she dine out every where, as well as at my sister’s?”
“No,” replied Edmund;
“I do not think she has ever been to a ball.
My mother seldom goes into company herself, and dines
nowhere but with Mrs. Grant, and Fanny stays at home
with her.”
“Oh! then the point is clear.
Miss Price is not out.”