Taking Fanny under his guidance to protect and support her since the day of her arrival, Edmund Bertram sought to lift her from the place the Bertram's drove her to, a menial position of near servitude. Mrs. Norris made it apparent to Fanny that she was subordinate to her cousins Maria and Julia due to her lack of education and the consequence of their noble birthright. Edmund sustained Fanny at her most vulnerable moments the times she knew she did not fit in, when she missed her brother William, and when she did not understand why people who were supposed to love her treated her so abrasively. At times Fanny became concerned by Edmund's behavior, particularly related to Mary Crawford because she knew Mary had immoral intentions in her hopes of marrying Edmund. Regardless of how she felt, Fanny persevered in supporting her beloved cousin and eventually succeeded in becoming his virtuous wife.
Henry Crawford, a charming fellow with an impressive estate, pursued Fanny fervently. His advances were well intentioned in the family's eyes, but to a discerning creature such as Fanny, those amoral aims were tainted with greed and self-interest. Time after time, Miss Morality rejected generous offers and advances; however, it was not this incident that made Fanny so willfully ethical, but it was her ability to stand against Sir Thomas. Given Fanny's dependence on Sir Thomas, and his