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"
If
I
did
not
know
her
to
be
happy
now
,
"
said
Emma
,
seriously
,
"
which
,
in
spite
of
every
little
drawback
from
her
scrupulous
conscience
,
she
must
be
,
I
could
not
bear
these
thanks
--
for
,
oh
!
Mrs.
Weston
,
if
there
were
an
account
drawn
up
of
the
evil
and
the
good
I
have
done
Miss
Fairfax
!
--
Well
(
checking
herself
,
and
trying
to
be
more
lively
)
,
this
is
all
to
be
forgotten
.
You
are
very
kind
to
bring
me
these
interesting
particulars
.
They
shew
her
to
the
greatest
advantage
.
I
am
sure
she
is
very
good
--
I
hope
she
will
be
very
happy
.
It
is
fit
that
the
fortune
should
be
on
his
side
,
for
I
think
the
merit
will
be
all
on
hers
.
"
Such
a
conclusion
could
not
pass
unanswered
by
Mrs.
Weston
.
She
thought
well
of
Frank
in
almost
every
respect
;
and
,
what
was
more
,
she
loved
him
very
much
,
and
her
defence
was
,
therefore
,
earnest
.
She
talked
with
a
great
deal
of
reason
,
and
at
least
equal
affection
--
but
she
had
too
much
to
urge
for
Emma
's
attention
;
it
was
soon
gone
to
Brunswick
Square
or
to
Donwell
;
she
forgot
to
attempt
to
listen
;
and
when
Mrs.
Weston
ended
with
,
"
We
have
not
yet
had
the
letter
we
are
so
anxious
for
,
you
know
,
but
I
hope
it
will
soon
come
,
"
she
was
obliged
to
pause
before
she
answered
,
and
at
last
obliged
to
answer
at
random
,
before
she
could
at
all
recollect
what
letter
it
was
which
they
were
so
anxious
for
.
Отключить рекламу
"
Are
you
well
,
my
Emma
?
"
was
Mrs.
Weston
's
parting
question
.
"
Oh
!
perfectly
.
I
am
always
well
,
you
know
.
Be
sure
to
give
me
intelligence
of
the
letter
as
soon
as
possible
.
"
Mrs.
Weston
's
communications
furnished
Emma
with
more
food
for
unpleasant
reflection
,
by
increasing
her
esteem
and
compassion
,
and
her
sense
of
past
injustice
towards
Miss
Fairfax
.
She
bitterly
regretted
not
having
sought
a
closer
acquaintance
with
her
,
and
blushed
for
the
envious
feelings
which
had
certainly
been
,
in
some
measure
,
the
cause
.
Had
she
followed
Mr.
Knightley
's
known
wishes
,
in
paying
that
attention
to
Miss
Fairfax
,
which
was
every
way
her
due
;
had
she
tried
to
know
her
better
;
had
she
done
her
part
towards
intimacy
;
had
she
endeavoured
to
find
a
friend
there
instead
of
in
Harriet
Smith
;
she
must
,
in
all
probability
,
have
been
spared
from
every
pain
which
pressed
on
her
now
.
--
Birth
,
abilities
,
and
education
,
had
been
equally
marking
one
as
an
associate
for
her
,
to
be
received
with
gratitude
;
and
the
other
--
what
was
she
?
--
Supposing
even
that
they
had
never
become
intimate
friends
;
that
she
had
never
been
admitted
into
Miss
Fairfax
's
confidence
on
this
important
matter
--
which
was
most
probable
--
still
,
in
knowing
her
as
she
ought
,
and
as
she
might
,
she
must
have
been
preserved
from
the
abominable
suspicions
of
an
improper
attachment
to
Mr.
Dixon
,
which
she
had
not
only
so
foolishly
fashioned
and
harboured
herself
,
but
had
so
unpardonably
imparted
;
an
idea
which
she
greatly
feared
had
been
made
a
subject
of
material
distress
to
the
delicacy
of
Jane
's
feelings
,
by
the
levity
or
carelessness
of
Frank
Churchill
's
.
Of
all
the
sources
of
evil
surrounding
the
former
,
since
her
coming
to
Highbury
,
she
was
persuaded
that
she
must
herself
have
been
the
worst
.
She
must
have
been
a
perpetual
enemy
.
They
never
could
have
been
all
three
together
,
without
her
having
stabbed
Jane
Fairfax
's
peace
in
a
thousand
instances
;
and
on
Box
Hill
,
perhaps
,
it
had
been
the
agony
of
a
mind
that
would
bear
no
more
.
Отключить рекламу
The
evening
of
this
day
was
very
long
,
and
melancholy
,
at
Hartfield
.
The
weather
added
what
it
could
of
gloom
.
A
cold
stormy
rain
set
in
,
and
nothing
of
July
appeared
but
in
the
trees
and
shrubs
,
which
the
wind
was
despoiling
,
and
the
length
of
the
day
,
which
only
made
such
cruel
sights
the
longer
visible
.
The
weather
affected
Mr.
Woodhouse
,
and
he
could
only
be
kept
tolerably
comfortable
by
almost
ceaseless
attention
on
his
daughter
's
side
,
and
by
exertions
which
had
never
cost
her
half
so
much
before
.
It
reminded
her
of
their
first
forlorn
tete-a-tete
,
on
the
evening
of
Mrs.
Weston
's
wedding-day
;
but
Mr.
Knightley
had
walked
in
then
,
soon
after
tea
,
and
dissipated
every
melancholy
fancy
.
Alas
!
such
delightful
proofs
of
Hartfield
's
attraction
,
as
those
sort
of
visits
conveyed
,
might
shortly
be
over
.
The
picture
which
she
had
then
drawn
of
the
privations
of
the
approaching
winter
,
had
proved
erroneous
;
no
friends
had
deserted
them
,
no
pleasures
had
been
lost
.
--
But
her
present
forebodings
she
feared
would
experience
no
similar
contradiction
.
The
prospect
before
her
now
,
was
threatening
to
a
degree
that
could
not
be
entirely
dispelled
--
that
might
not
be
even
partially
brightened
.
If
all
took
place
that
might
take
place
among
the
circle
of
her
friends
,
Hartfield
must
be
comparatively
deserted
;
and
she
left
to
cheer
her
father
with
the
spirits
only
of
ruined
happiness
.