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"
Her
friends
must
all
be
sorry
to
lose
her
;
and
will
not
Colonel
and
Mrs.
Campbell
be
sorry
to
find
that
she
has
engaged
herself
before
their
return
?
"
"
Yes
;
Jane
says
she
is
sure
they
will
;
but
yet
,
this
is
such
a
situation
as
she
can
not
feel
herself
justified
in
declining
.
I
was
so
astonished
when
she
first
told
me
what
she
had
been
saying
to
Mrs.
Elton
,
and
when
Mrs.
Elton
at
the
same
moment
came
congratulating
me
upon
it
!
It
was
before
tea
--
stay
--
no
,
it
could
not
be
before
tea
,
because
we
were
just
going
to
cards
--
and
yet
it
was
before
tea
,
because
I
remember
thinking
--
Oh
!
no
,
now
I
recollect
,
now
I
have
it
;
something
happened
before
tea
,
but
not
that
.
Mr.
Elton
was
called
out
of
the
room
before
tea
,
old
John
Abdy
's
son
wanted
to
speak
with
him
.
Poor
old
John
,
I
have
a
great
regard
for
him
;
he
was
clerk
to
my
poor
father
twenty-seven
years
;
and
now
,
poor
old
man
,
he
is
bed-ridden
,
and
very
poorly
with
the
rheumatic
gout
in
his
joints
--
I
must
go
and
see
him
to-day
;
and
so
will
Jane
,
I
am
sure
,
if
she
gets
out
at
all
.
And
poor
John
's
son
came
to
talk
to
Mr.
Elton
about
relief
from
the
parish
;
he
is
very
well
to
do
himself
,
you
know
,
being
head
man
at
the
Crown
,
ostler
,
and
every
thing
of
that
sort
,
but
still
he
can
not
keep
his
father
without
some
help
;
and
so
,
when
Mr.
Elton
came
back
,
he
told
us
what
John
ostler
had
been
telling
him
,
and
then
it
came
out
about
the
chaise
having
been
sent
to
Randalls
to
take
Mr.
Frank
Churchill
to
Richmond
.
That
was
what
happened
before
tea
.
It
was
after
tea
that
Jane
spoke
to
Mrs.
Elton
.
"
Miss
Bates
would
hardly
give
Emma
time
to
say
how
perfectly
new
this
circumstance
was
to
her
;
but
as
without
supposing
it
possible
that
she
could
be
ignorant
of
any
of
the
particulars
of
Mr.
Frank
Churchill
's
going
,
she
proceeded
to
give
them
all
,
it
was
of
no
consequence
.
What
Mr.
Elton
had
learned
from
the
ostler
on
the
subject
,
being
the
accumulation
of
the
ostler
's
own
knowledge
,
and
the
knowledge
of
the
servants
at
Randalls
,
was
,
that
a
messenger
had
come
over
from
Richmond
soon
after
the
return
of
the
party
from
Box
Hill
--
which
messenger
,
however
,
had
been
no
more
than
was
expected
;
and
that
Mr.
Churchill
had
sent
his
nephew
a
few
lines
,
containing
,
upon
the
whole
,
a
tolerable
account
of
Mrs.
Churchill
,
and
only
wishing
him
not
to
delay
coming
back
beyond
the
next
morning
early
;
but
that
Mr.
Frank
Churchill
having
resolved
to
go
home
directly
,
without
waiting
at
all
,
and
his
horse
seeming
to
have
got
a
cold
,
Tom
had
been
sent
off
immediately
for
the
Crown
chaise
,
and
the
ostler
had
stood
out
and
seen
it
pass
by
,
the
boy
going
a
good
pace
,
and
driving
very
steady
.
There
was
nothing
in
all
this
either
to
astonish
or
interest
,
and
it
caught
Emma
's
attention
only
as
it
united
with
the
subject
which
already
engaged
her
mind
.
The
contrast
between
Mrs.
Churchill
's
importance
in
the
world
,
and
Jane
Fairfax
's
,
struck
her
;
one
was
every
thing
,
the
other
nothing
--
and
she
sat
musing
on
the
difference
of
woman
's
destiny
,
and
quite
unconscious
on
what
her
eyes
were
fixed
,
till
roused
by
Miss
Bates
's
saying
,
"
Aye
,
I
see
what
you
are
thinking
of
,
the
pianoforte
.
What
is
to
become
of
that
?
--
Very
true
.
Poor
dear
Jane
was
talking
of
it
just
now
.
--
'
You
must
go
,
'
said
she
.
'
You
and
I
must
part
.
You
will
have
no
business
here
--
Let
it
stay
,
however
,
'
said
she
;
'
give
it
houseroom
till
Colonel
Campbell
comes
back
.
I
shall
talk
about
it
to
him
;
he
will
settle
for
me
;
he
will
help
me
out
of
all
my
difficulties
.
'
--
And
to
this
day
,
I
do
believe
,
she
knows
not
whether
it
was
his
present
or
his
daughter
's
.
"
Now
Emma
was
obliged
to
think
of
the
pianoforte
;
and
the
remembrance
of
all
her
former
fanciful
and
unfair
conjectures
was
so
little
pleasing
,
that
she
soon
allowed
herself
to
believe
her
visit
had
been
long
enough
;
and
,
with
a
repetition
of
every
thing
that
she
could
venture
to
say
of
the
good
wishes
which
she
really
felt
,
took
leave
.