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<Text id=AusSand> 
<Author>Austen, Jane</Author> 
<Title>Sanditon</Title> 
<Edition>Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1975</Edition> 
<Date>1817</Date> 
<body>
<loc><locdoc>AusSand1></locdoc><milestone n=1> 
<div0 type=chapter n=1> 
A GENTLEMAN AND A LADY travelling from Tunbridge towards 
that part of the Sussex coast which lies between Hastings and 
Eastbourne, being induced by business to quit the high road and 
attempt a very rough lane, were overturned in toiling up its long 
a scent, half rock, half sand. 
The accident happened just beyond the only gentleman's house 
near the lane -- a house which their driver, on being first required 
to take that direction, had conceived to be necessarily their object 
and had with most unwilling looks been constrained to pass by. 
He had grumbled and shaken his shoulders and pitied and cut his 
horses so sharply that he might have been open to the suspicion 
of overturning them on purpose (especially as the carriage was 
not his master's own) if the r . . .