A week was gone since Edmund might
be supposed in town, and Fanny had heard nothing of
him. There were three different conclusions to
be drawn from his silence, between which her mind
was in fluctuation; each of them at times being held
the most probable. Either his going had been
again delayed, or he had yet procured no opportunity
of seeing Miss Crawford alone, or he was too happy
for letter-writing!
One morning, about this time, Fanny
having now been nearly four weeks from Mansfield,
a point which she never failed to think over and calculate
every day, as she and Susan were preparing to remove,
as usual, upstairs, they were stopped by the knock
of a visitor, whom they felt they could not avoid,
from Rebecca’s alertness in going to the door,
a duty which always interested her beyond any other.
It was a gentleman’s voice;
it was a voice that Fanny was just turning pale about,
when Mr. Crawford walked into the room.
Good sense, like hers, will always
act when really called upon; and she found that she
had been able to name him to her mother, and recall
her remembrance of the name, as that of “William’s
friend,” though she could not previously have
believed herself capable of uttering a syllable at
such a moment. The consciousness of his being
known there only as William’s friend was some
support. Having introduced him, however, and
being all reseated, the terrors that occurred of what
this visit might lead to were overpowering, and she
fancied herself on the point of fainting away.
While trying to keep herself alive,
their visitor, who had at first approached her with
as animated a countenance as ever, was wisely and
kindly keeping his eyes away, and giving her time
to recover, while he devoted himself entirely to her
mother, addressing her, and attending to her with
the utmost politeness and propriety, at the same time
with a degree of friendliness, of interest at least,
which was making his manner perfect.
Mrs. Price’s manners were also
at their best. Warmed by the sight of such a
friend to her son, and regulated by the wish of appearing
to advantage before him, she was overflowing with
gratitude—artless, maternal gratitude—
which could not be unpleasing. Mr. Price was
out, which she regretted very much. Fanny was
just recovered enough to feel that she could
not regret it; for to her many other sources of uneasiness
was added the severe one of shame for the home in
which he found her. She might scold herself for
the weakness, but there was no scolding it away.
She was ashamed, and she would have been yet more
ashamed of her father than of all the rest.
They talked of William, a subject
on which Mrs. Price could never tire; and Mr. Crawford
was as warm in his commendation as even her heart
could wish. She felt that she had never seen
so agreeable a man in her life; and was only astonished
to find that, so great and so agreeable as he was,
he should be come down to Portsmouth neither on a
visit to the port-admiral, nor the commissioner, nor
yet with the intention of going over to the island,
nor of seeing the dockyard. Nothing of all that
she had been used to think of as the proof of importance,
or the employment of wealth, had brought him to Portsmouth.
He had reached it late the night before, was come for
a day or two, was staying at the Crown, had accidentally
met with a navy officer or two of his acquaintance
since his arrival, but had no object of that kind
in coming.
By the time he had given all this
information, it was not unreasonable to suppose that
Fanny might be looked at and spoken to; and she was
tolerably able to bear his eye, and hear that he had
spent half an hour with his sister the evening before
his leaving London; that she had sent her best and
kindest love, but had had no time for writing; that
he thought himself lucky in seeing Mary for even half
an hour, having spent scarcely twenty-four hours in
London, after his return from Norfolk, before he set
off again; that her cousin Edmund was in town, had
been in town, he understood, a few days; that he had
not seen him himself, but that he was well, had left
them all well at Mansfield, and was to dine, as yesterday,
with the Frasers.
Fanny listened collectedly, even to
the last-mentioned circumstance; nay, it seemed a
relief to her worn mind to be at any certainty; and
the words, “then by this time it is all settled,”
passed internally, without more evidence of emotion
than a faint blush.
After talking a little more about
Mansfield, a subject in which her interest was most
apparent, Crawford began to hint at the expediency
of an early walk. “It was a lovely morning,
and at that season of the year a fine morning so often
turned off, that it was wisest for everybody not to
delay their exercise”; and such hints producing
nothing, he soon proceeded to a positive recommendation
to Mrs. Price and her daughters to take their walk
without loss of time. Now they came to an understanding.
Mrs. Price, it appeared, scarcely ever stirred out
of doors, except of a Sunday; she owned she could
seldom, with her large family, find time for a walk.
“Would she not, then, persuade her daughters
to take advantage of such weather, and allow him the
pleasure of attending them?” Mrs. Price was
greatly obliged and very complying. “Her
daughters were very much confined; Portsmouth was
a sad place; they did not often get out; and she knew
they had some errands in the town, which they would
be very glad to do.” And the consequence
was, that Fanny, strange as it was— strange,
awkward, and distressing—found herself and
Susan, within ten minutes, walking towards the High
Street with Mr. Crawford.
It was soon pain upon pain, confusion
upon confusion; for they were hardly in the High Street
before they met her father, whose appearance was not
the better from its being Saturday. He stopt;
and, ungentlemanlike as he looked, Fanny was obliged
to introduce him to Mr. Crawford. She could not
have a doubt of the manner in which Mr. Crawford must
be struck. He must be ashamed and disgusted
altogether. He must soon give her up, and cease
to have the smallest inclination for the match; and
yet, though she had been so much wanting his affection
to be cured, this was a sort of cure that would be
almost as bad as the complaint; and I believe there
is scarcely a young lady in the United Kingdoms who
would not rather put up with the misfortune of being
sought by a clever, agreeable man, than have him driven
away by the vulgarity of her nearest relations.
Mr. Crawford probably could not regard
his future father-in-law with any idea of taking him
for a model in dress; but (as Fanny instantly, and
to her great relief, discerned) her father was a very
different man, a very different Mr. Price in his behaviour
to this most highly respected stranger, from what
he was in his own family at home. His manners
now, though not polished, were more than passable:
they were grateful, animated, manly; his expressions
were those of an attached father, and a sensible man;
his loud tones did very well in the open air, and
there was not a single oath to be heard. Such
was his instinctive compliment to the good manners
of Mr. Crawford; and, be the consequence what it might,
Fanny’s immediate feelings were infinitely soothed.
The conclusion of the two gentlemen’s
civilities was an offer of Mr. Price’s to take
Mr. Crawford into the dockyard, which Mr. Crawford,
desirous of accepting as a favour what was intended
as such, though he had seen the dockyard again and
again, and hoping to be so much the longer with Fanny,
was very gratefully disposed to avail himself of,
if the Miss Prices were not afraid of the fatigue;
and as it was somehow or other ascertained, or inferred,
or at least acted upon, that they were not at all afraid,
to the dockyard they were all to go; and but for Mr.
Crawford, Mr. Price would have turned thither directly,
without the smallest consideration for his daughters’
errands in the High Street. He took care, however,
that they should be allowed to go to the shops they
came out expressly to visit; and it did not delay
them long, for Fanny could so little bear to excite
impatience, or be waited for, that before the gentlemen,
as they stood at the door, could do more than begin
upon the last naval regulations, or settle the number
of three-deckers now in commission, their companions
were ready to proceed.
They were then to set forward for
the dockyard at once, and the walk would have been
conducted—according to Mr. Crawford’s
opinion—in a singular manner, had Mr. Price
been allowed the entire regulation of it, as the two
girls, he found, would have been left to follow, and
keep up with them or not, as they could, while they
walked on together at their own hasty pace. He
was able to introduce some improvement occasionally,
though by no means to the extent he wished; he absolutely
would not walk away from them; and at any crossing
or any crowd, when Mr. Price was only calling out,
“Come, girls; come, Fan; come, Sue, take care
of yourselves; keep a sharp lookout!” he would
give them his particular attendance.
Once fairly in the dockyard, he began
to reckon upon some happy intercourse with Fanny,
as they were very soon joined by a brother lounger
of Mr. Price’s, who was come to take his daily
survey of how things went on, and who must prove a
far more worthy companion than himself; and after
a time the two officers seemed very well satisfied
going about together, and discussing matters of equal
and never-failing interest, while the young people
sat down upon some timbers in the yard, or found a
seat on board a vessel in the stocks which they all
went to look at. Fanny was most conveniently
in want of rest. Crawford could not have wished
her more fatigued or more ready to sit down; but he
could have wished her sister away. A quick-looking
girl of Susan’s age was the very worst third
in the world: totally different from Lady Bertram,
all eyes and ears; and there was no introducing the
main point before her. He must content himself
with being only generally agreeable, and letting Susan
have her share of entertainment, with the indulgence,
now and then, of a look or hint for the better-informed
and conscious Fanny. Norfolk was what he had
mostly to talk of: there he had been some time,
and everything there was rising in importance from
his present schemes. Such a man could come from
no place, no society, without importing something
to amuse; his journeys and his acquaintance were all
of use, and Susan was entertained in a way quite new
to her. For Fanny, somewhat more was related
than the accidental agreeableness of the parties he
had been in. For her approbation, the particular
reason of his going into Norfolk at all, at this unusual
time of year, was given. It had been real business,
relative to the renewal of a lease in which the welfare
of a large and—he believed—
industrious family was at stake. He had suspected
his agent of some underhand dealing; of meaning to
bias him against the deserving; and he had determined
to go himself, and thoroughly investigate the merits
of the case. He had gone, had done even more
good than he had foreseen, had been useful to more
than his first plan had comprehended, and was now
able to congratulate himself upon it, and to feel
that in performing a duty, he had secured agreeable
recollections for his own mind. He had introduced
himself to some tenants whom he had never seen before;
he had begun making acquaintance with cottages whose
very existence, though on his own estate, had been
hitherto unknown to him. This was aimed, and
well aimed, at Fanny. It was pleasing to hear
him speak so properly; here he had been acting as
he ought to do. To be the friend of the poor
and the oppressed! Nothing could be more grateful
to her; and she was on the point of giving him an
approving look, when it was all frightened off by
his adding a something too pointed of his hoping soon
to have an assistant, a friend, a guide in every plan
of utility or charity for Everingham: a somebody
that would make Everingham and all about it a dearer
object than it had ever been yet.
She turned away, and wished he would
not say such things. She was willing to allow
he might have more good qualities than she had been
wont to suppose. She began to feel the possibility
of his turning out well at last; but he was and must
ever be completely unsuited to her, and ought not
to think of her.
He perceived that enough had been
said of Everingham, and that it would be as well to
talk of something else, and turned to Mansfield.
He could not have chosen better; that was a topic
to bring back her attention and her looks almost instantly.
It was a real indulgence to her to hear or to speak
of Mansfield. Now so long divided from everybody
who knew the place, she felt it quite the voice of
a friend when he mentioned it, and led the way to her
fond exclamations in praise of its beauties and comforts,
and by his honourable tribute to its inhabitants allowed
her to gratify her own heart in the warmest eulogium,
in speaking of her uncle as all that was clever and
good, and her aunt as having the sweetest of all sweet
tempers.
He had a great attachment to Mansfield
himself; he said so; he looked forward with the hope
of spending much, very much, of his time there; always
there, or in the neighbourhood. He particularly
built upon a very happy summer and autumn there this
year; he felt that it would be so: he depended
upon it; a summer and autumn infinitely superior to
the last. As animated, as diversified, as social,
but with circumstances of superiority undescribable.
“Mansfield, Sotherton, Thornton
Lacey,” he continued; “what a society
will be comprised in those houses! And at Michaelmas,
perhaps, a fourth may be added: some small hunting-box
in the vicinity of everything so dear; for as to any
partnership in Thornton Lacey, as Edmund Bertram once
good-humouredly proposed, I hope I foresee two objections:
two fair, excellent, irresistible objections to that
plan.”
Fanny was doubly silenced here; though
when the moment was passed, could regret that she
had not forced herself into the acknowledged comprehension
of one half of his meaning, and encouraged him to
say something more of his sister and Edmund.
It was a subject which she must learn to speak of,
and the weakness that shrunk from it would soon be
quite unpardonable.
When Mr. Price and his friend had
seen all that they wished, or had time for, the others
were ready to return; and in the course of their walk
back, Mr. Crawford contrived a minute’s privacy
for telling Fanny that his only business in Portsmouth
was to see her; that he was come down for a couple
of days on her account, and hers only, and because
he could not endure a longer total separation.
She was sorry, really sorry; and yet in spite of this
and the two or three other things which she wished
he had not said, she thought him altogether improved
since she had seen him; he was much more gentle, obliging,
and attentive to other people’s feelings than
he had ever been at Mansfield; she had never seen
him so agreeable—so near being agreeable;
his behaviour to her father could not offend, and there
was something particularly kind and proper in the notice
he took of Susan. He was decidedly improved.
She wished the next day over, she wished he had come
only for one day; but it was not so very bad as she
would have expected: the pleasure of talking
of Mansfield was so very great!
Before they parted, she had to thank
him for another pleasure, and one of no trivial kind.
Her father asked him to do them the honour of taking
his mutton with them, and Fanny had time for only
one thrill of horror, before he declared himself prevented
by a prior engagement. He was engaged to dinner
already both for that day and the next; he had met
with some acquaintance at the Crown who would not be
denied; he should have the honour, however, of waiting
on them again on the morrow, etc., and so they
parted—Fanny in a state of actual felicity
from escaping so horrible an evil!
To have had him join their family
dinner-party, and see all their deficiencies, would
have been dreadful! Rebecca’s cookery and
Rebecca’s waiting, and Betsey’s eating
at table without restraint, and pulling everything
about as she chose, were what Fanny herself was not
yet enough inured to for her often to make a tolerable
meal. She was nice only from natural delicacy,
but he had been brought up in a school of luxury
and epicurism.