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    Chapter 19

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    The recovery of Denbigh was as rapid as the most sanguine expectation of
    his friends could hope for, and in ten days he left his bed, and would sit
    an hour or two at a time in his dressing-room, where Mrs. Wilson,
    accompanied by Jane or Emily, came and read to him; and it was a remark of
    Sir Edward's gamekeeper, that the woodcocks had become so tame during the
    time Mr. Moseley was shut up in attendance on his friend, that Captain
    Jarvis was at last actually seen to bag one honestly.

    As Jarvis felt something like a consciousness that but for his folly the
    accident would not have happened, and also something very like shame for
    the manner he had shrunk from the danger Denbigh had so nobly met, he
    pretended a recall to his regiment, then on duty near London, and left the
    deanery. He went off as he came in--in the colonel's tilbury, and
    accompanied by his friend and his pointers, John, who saw them pass from
    the windows of Denbigh's dressing-room, fervently prayed he might never
    come back again--the chip-shooting poacher!

    Colonel Egerton had taken leave of Jane the evening preceding, with many
    assurances of the anxiety with which he should look forward to the moment
    of their meeting at L----, whither he intended repairing as soon as his
    corps had gone through its annual review. Jane had followed the bent of
    her natural feelings too much, during the period of Denbigh's uncertain
    fate, to think much of her lover, or anything else but her rescued sister
    and her preserver; but now the former was pronounced in safety, and the
    latter, by the very reaction of her grief, was, if possible, happier than
    ever, Jane dwelt in melancholy sadness on the perfections of the man who
    had taken with him the best affections (as she thought) of her heart. With
    him all was perfect: his morals were unexceptionable; his manners showed
    it; his tenderness of disposition manifest, for they had wept together
    over the distresses of more than one fictitious heroine; his temper, how
    amiable! he was never angry--she had never Been it; his opinions, his
    tastes, how correct! they were her own; his form, his face, how
    agreeable!--her eyes had seen it, and her heart acknowledged it; besides,
    his eyes confessed the power of her own charms; he was brave, for he was a
    soldier;--in short, as Emily had predicted, he was a hero--for he was

    Colonel Egerton.

    Had Jane been possessed of less exuberance of fancy, she might have been a
    little at a loss to identify all these good properties with her hero: or
    had she possessed a matured or well-regulated judgment to control that
    fancy, they might possibly have assumed a different appearance. No
    explanation had taken place between-them, however. Jane knew, both by her
    own feelings and by all the legends of
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