id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_oc6752ffcbbuzcrojqq7pfgptm Thomas R. Edwards, The Difficult Beauty of Mansfield Park 1965 18 .pdf application/pdf 7635 443 74 entire persuasiveness, as being more gravely flawed and less charming than he finds them, even at first reading; and in Mary, especially, Jane Austen diagnoses a moral disorder that, because less nor are Edmund, Mary, and Henry so distinctly given moral moral freedom; even Edmund attempts to urge Fanny into Such consciousness is usual in Mary's conversation: "Miss Crawford turned her eye on [Fanny], as if wanting to hear or see more, Henry watches Fanny, Edmund (unwittingly Mary recommends Henry to Fanny by For all her affectionate concern for Fanny, Jane Austen keeps After Edmund gives Mary up, Fanny tells him of her interest "my Fanny" to Jane Austen, but the tone of indulgent affection of interest or embarrassment about Mary and Henry, but an understanding that the union of Fanny and Edmund falls somewhat Like Fanny, he will never quite know what he missed, and we must what Jane Austen knows-or most of it-about life. ./cache/work_oc6752ffcbbuzcrojqq7pfgptm.pdf ./txt/work_oc6752ffcbbuzcrojqq7pfgptm.txt