Chapter 39


Mansfield Park, by Jane Austen





Chapter 39



Could Sir Thomas have seen all his niece’s feelings, when she wrote her first letter to her aunt, he
would not have despaired; for though a good night’s rest, a pleasant morning, the hope of soon seeing William again, and
the comparatively quiet state of the house, from Tom and Charles being gone to school, Sam on some project of his own,
and her father on his usual lounges, enabled her to express herself cheerfully on the subject of home, there were still,
to her own perfect consciousness, many drawbacks suppressed. Could he have seen only half that she felt before the end of
a week, he would have thought Mr. Crawford sure of her, and been delighted with his own sagacity.


Before the week ended, it was all disappointment. In the first place, William was gone. The Thrush had had her orders,
the wind had changed, and he was sailed within four days from their reaching Portsmouth; and during those days she had
seen him only twice, in a short and hurried way, when he had come ashore on duty. There had been no free conversation, no
walk on the ramparts, no visit to the dockyard, no acquaintance with the Thrush, nothing of all that they had planned and
depended on. Everything in that quarter failed her, except William’s affection. His last thought on leaving home was for
her. He stepped back again to the door to say, “Take care of Fanny, mother. She is tender, and not used to rough it like
the rest of us. I charge you, take care of Fanny.”


William was gone: and the home he had left her in was, Fanny could not conceal it from herself, in almost every
respect the very reverse of what she could have wished. It was the abode of noise, disorder, and impropriety. Nobody was
in their right place, nothing was done as it ought to be. She could not respect her parents as she had hoped. On her
father, her confidence had not been sanguine, but he was more negligent of his family, his habits were worse, and his
manners coarser, than she had been prepared for. He did not want abilities but he had no curiosity, and no information
beyond his profession; he read only the newspaper and the navy-list; he talked only of the dockyard, the harbour,
Spithead, and the Motherbank; he swore and he drank, he was dirty and gross. She had never been able to recall anything
approaching to tenderness in his former treatment of herself. There had remained only a general impression of roughness
and loudness; and now he scarcely ever noticed her, but to make her the object of a coarse joke.


Her disappointment in her mother was greater: there she had hoped much, and found almost nothing. Every
flattering scheme of being of consequence to her soon fell to the ground. Mrs. Price was not unkind; but, instead of
gaining on her affection and confidence, and becoming more and more dear, her daughter never met with greater kindness
from her than on the first day of her arrival. The instinct of nature was soon satisfied, and Mrs. Price’s attachment had
no other source. Her heart and her time were already quite full; she had neither leisure nor affection to bestow on
Fanny. Her daughters never had been much to her. She was fond of her sons, especially of William, but Betsey was the
first of her girls whom she had ever much regarded. To her she was most injudiciously indulgent. William was her pride;
Betsey her darling; and John, Richard, Sam, Tom, and Charles occupied all the rest of her maternal solicitude,
alternately her worries and her comforts. These shared her heart: her time was given chiefly to her house and her
servants. Her days were spent in a kind of slow bustle; all was busy without getting on, always behindhand and lamenting
it, without altering her ways; wishing to be an economist, without contrivance or regularity; dissatisfied with her
servants, without skill to make them better, and whether helping, or reprimanding, or indulging them, without any power
of engaging their respect.


Of her two sisters, Mrs. Price very much more resembled Lady Bertram than Mrs. Norris. She was a manager by necessity,
without any of Mrs. Norris’s inclination for it, or any of her activity. Her disposition was naturally easy and indolent,
like Lady Bertram’s; and a situation of similar affluence and do-nothingness would have been much more suited to her
capacity than the exertions and self-denials of the one which her imprudent marriage had placed her in. She might have
made just as good a woman of consequence as Lady Bertram, but Mrs. Norris would have been a more respectable mother of
nine children on a small income.


Much of all this Fanny could not but be sensible of. She might scruple to make use of the words, but she must and did
feel that her mother was a partial, ill-judging parent, a dawdle, a slattern, who neither taught nor restrained her
children, whose house was the scene of mismanagement and discomfort from beginning to end, and who had no talent, no
conversation, no affection towards herself; no curiosity to know her better, no desire of her friendship, and no
inclination for her company that could lessen her sense of such feelings.


Fanny was very anxious to be useful, and not to appear above her home, or in any way disqualified or disinclined, by
her foreign education, from contributing her help to its comforts, and therefore set about working for Sam immediately;
and by working early and late, with perseverance and great despatch, did so much that the boy was shipped off at last,
with more than half his linen ready. She had great pleasure in feeling her usefulness, but could not conceive how they
would have managed without her.


Sam, loud and overbearing as he was, she rather regretted when he went, for he was clever and intelligent, and glad to
be employed in any errand in the town; and though spurning the remonstrances of Susan, given as they were, though very
reasonable in themselves, with ill-timed and powerless warmth, was beginning to be influenced by Fanny’s services and
gentle persuasions; and she found that the best of the three younger ones was gone in him: Tom and Charles being at least
as many years as they were his juniors distant from that age of feeling and reason, which might suggest the expediency of
making friends, and of endeavouring to be less disagreeable. Their sister soon despaired of making the smallest
impression on them; they were quite untameable by any means of address which she had spirits or time to attempt.
Every afternoon brought a return of their riotous games all over the house; and she very early learned to sigh at the
approach of Saturday’s constant half-holiday.


Betsey, too, a spoiled child, trained up to think the alphabet her greatest enemy, left to be with the servants at her
pleasure, and then encouraged to report any evil of them, she was almost as ready to despair of being able to love or
assist; and of Susan’s temper she had many doubts. Her continual disagreements with her mother, her rash squabbles with
Tom and Charles, and petulance with Betsey, were at least so distressing to Fanny that, though admitting they were by no
means without provocation, she feared the disposition that could push them to such length must be far from amiable, and
from affording any repose to herself.


Such was the home which was to put Mansfield out of her head, and teach her to think of her cousin Edmund with
moderated feelings. On the contrary, she could think of nothing but Mansfield, its beloved inmates, its happy ways.
Everything where she now was in full contrast to it. The elegance, propriety, regularity, harmony, and perhaps, above
all, the peace and tranquillity of Mansfield, were brought to her remembrance every hour of the day, by the prevalence of
everything opposite to them here.


The living in incessant noise was, to a frame and temper delicate and nervous like Fanny’s, an evil which no
superadded elegance or harmony could have entirely atoned for. It was the greatest misery of all. At Mansfield, no sounds
of contention, no raised voice, no abrupt bursts, no tread of violence, was ever heard; all proceeded in a regular course
of cheerful orderliness; everybody had their due importance; everybody’s feelings were consulted. If tenderness could be
ever supposed wanting, good sense and good breeding supplied its place; and as to the little irritations sometimes
introduced by aunt Norris, they were short, they were trifling, they were as a drop of water to the ocean, compared with
the ceaseless tumult of her present abode. Here everybody was noisy, every voice was loud (excepting, perhaps, her
mother’s, which resembled the soft monotony of Lady Bertram’s, only worn into fretfulness). Whatever was wanted was
hallooed for, and the servants hallooed out their excuses from the kitchen. The doors were in constant banging, the
stairs were never at rest, nothing was done without a clatter, nobody sat still, and nobody could command attention when
they spoke.


In a review of the two houses, as they appeared to her before the end of a week, Fanny was tempted to apply to them
Dr. Johnson’s celebrated judgment as to matrimony and celibacy, and say, that though Mansfield Park might have some
pains, Portsmouth could have no pleasures.







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