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"
Well
,
he
is
coming
,
you
see
;
good
news
,
I
think
.
Well
,
what
do
you
say
to
it
?
--
I
always
told
you
he
would
be
here
again
soon
,
did
not
I
?
--
Anne
,
my
dear
,
did
not
I
always
tell
you
so
,
and
you
would
not
believe
me
?
--
In
town
next
week
,
you
see
--
at
the
latest
,
I
dare
say
;
for
she
is
as
impatient
as
the
black
gentleman
when
any
thing
is
to
be
done
;
most
likely
they
will
be
there
to-morrow
or
Saturday
.
As
to
her
illness
,
all
nothing
of
course
.
But
it
is
an
excellent
thing
to
have
Frank
among
us
again
,
so
near
as
town
.
They
will
stay
a
good
while
when
they
do
come
,
and
he
will
be
half
his
time
with
us
.
This
is
precisely
what
I
wanted
.
Well
,
pretty
good
news
,
is
not
it
?
Have
you
finished
it
?
Has
Emma
read
it
all
?
Put
it
up
,
put
it
up
;
we
will
have
a
good
talk
about
it
some
other
time
,
but
it
will
not
do
now
.
I
shall
only
just
mention
the
circumstance
to
the
others
in
a
common
way
.
"
Mrs.
Weston
was
most
comfortably
pleased
on
the
occasion
.
Her
looks
and
words
had
nothing
to
restrain
them
.
She
was
happy
,
she
knew
she
was
happy
,
and
knew
she
ought
to
be
happy
.
Her
congratulations
were
warm
and
open
;
but
Emma
could
not
speak
so
fluently
She
was
a
little
occupied
in
weighing
her
own
feelings
,
and
trying
to
understand
the
degree
of
her
agitation
,
which
she
rather
thought
was
considerable
.
Отключить рекламу
Mr.
Weston
,
however
,
too
eager
to
be
very
observant
,
too
communicative
to
want
others
to
talk
,
was
very
well
satisfied
with
what
she
did
say
,
and
soon
moved
away
to
make
the
rest
of
his
friends
happy
by
a
partial
communication
of
what
the
whole
room
must
have
overheard
already
.
It
was
well
that
he
took
every
body
's
joy
for
granted
,
or
he
might
not
have
thought
either
Mr.
Woodhouse
or
Mr.
Knightley
particularly
delighted
.
They
were
the
first
entitled
,
after
Mrs.
Weston
and
Emma
,
to
be
made
happy
--
from
them
he
would
have
proceeded
to
Miss
Fairfax
,
but
she
was
so
deep
in
conversation
with
John
Knightley
,
that
it
would
have
been
too
positive
an
interruption
;
and
finding
himself
close
to
Mrs.
Elton
,
and
her
attention
disengaged
,
he
necessarily
began
on
the
subject
with
her
.
"
I
hope
I
shall
soon
have
the
pleasure
of
introducing
my
son
to
you
,
"
said
Mr.
Weston
.
Mrs.
Elton
,
very
willing
to
suppose
a
particular
compliment
intended
her
by
such
a
hope
,
smiled
most
graciously
.
Отключить рекламу
"
You
have
heard
of
a
certain
Frank
Churchill
,
I
presume
,
"
he
continued
--
"
and
know
him
to
be
my
son
,
though
he
does
not
bear
my
name
.
"
"
Oh
!
yes
,
and
I
shall
be
very
happy
in
his
acquaintance
.
I
am
sure
Mr.
Elton
will
lose
no
time
in
calling
on
him
;
and
we
shall
both
have
great
pleasure
in
seeing
him
at
the
Vicarage
.
"
"
You
are
very
obliging
.
--
Frank
will
be
extremely
happy
,
I
am
sure
.
--
He
is
to
be
in
town
next
week
,
if
not
sooner
.
We
have
notice
of
it
in
a
letter
to-day
.
I
met
the
letters
in
my
way
this
morning
,
and
seeing
my
son
's
hand
,
presumed
to
open
it
--
though
it
was
not
directed
to
me
--
it
was
to
Mrs.
Weston
.
She
is
his
principal
correspondent
,
I
assure
you
.
I
hardly
ever
get
a
letter
.
"