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When
he
came
to
Miss
Woodhouse
,
he
was
obliged
to
read
the
whole
of
it
aloud
--
all
that
related
to
her
,
with
a
smile
;
a
look
;
a
shake
of
the
head
;
a
word
or
two
of
assent
,
or
disapprobation
;
or
merely
of
love
,
as
the
subject
required
;
concluding
,
however
,
seriously
,
and
,
after
steady
reflection
,
thus
--
"
Very
bad
--
though
it
might
have
been
worse
.
--
Playing
a
most
dangerous
game
.
Too
much
indebted
to
the
event
for
his
acquittal
.
--
No
judge
of
his
own
manners
by
you
.
--
Always
deceived
in
fact
by
his
own
wishes
,
and
regardless
of
little
besides
his
own
convenience
.
--
Fancying
you
to
have
fathomed
his
secret
.
Natural
enough
!
--
his
own
mind
full
of
intrigue
,
that
he
should
suspect
it
in
others
.
--
Mystery
;
Finesse
--
how
they
pervert
the
understanding
!
My
Emma
,
does
not
every
thing
serve
to
prove
more
and
more
the
beauty
of
truth
and
sincerity
in
all
our
dealings
with
each
other
?
"
Emma
agreed
to
it
,
and
with
a
blush
of
sensibility
on
Harriet
's
account
,
which
she
could
not
give
any
sincere
explanation
of
.
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"
You
had
better
go
on
,
"
said
she
.
He
did
so
,
but
very
soon
stopt
again
to
say
,
"
the
pianoforte
!
Ah
!
That
was
the
act
of
a
very
,
very
young
man
,
one
too
young
to
consider
whether
the
inconvenience
of
it
might
not
very
much
exceed
the
pleasure
.
A
boyish
scheme
,
indeed
!
--
I
can
not
comprehend
a
man
's
wishing
to
give
a
woman
any
proof
of
affection
which
he
knows
she
would
rather
dispense
with
;
and
he
did
know
that
she
would
have
prevented
the
instrument
's
coming
if
she
could
.
"
After
this
,
he
made
some
progress
without
any
pause
.
Frank
Churchill
's
confession
of
having
behaved
shamefully
was
the
first
thing
to
call
for
more
than
a
word
in
passing
.
"
I
perfectly
agree
with
you
,
sir
,
"
--
was
then
his
remark
.
"
You
did
behave
very
shamefully
.
You
never
wrote
a
truer
line
.
"
And
having
gone
through
what
immediately
followed
of
the
basis
of
their
disagreement
,
and
his
persisting
to
act
in
direct
opposition
to
Jane
Fairfax
's
sense
of
right
,
he
made
a
fuller
pause
to
say
,
"
This
is
very
bad
.
--
He
had
induced
her
to
place
herself
,
for
his
sake
,
in
a
situation
of
extreme
difficulty
and
uneasiness
,
and
it
should
have
been
his
first
object
to
prevent
her
from
suffering
unnecessarily
.
--
She
must
have
had
much
more
to
contend
with
,
in
carrying
on
the
correspondence
,
than
he
could
.
He
should
have
respected
even
unreasonable
scruples
,
had
there
been
such
;
but
hers
were
all
reasonable
.
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We
must
look
to
her
one
fault
,
and
remember
that
she
had
done
a
wrong
thing
in
consenting
to
the
engagement
,
to
bear
that
she
should
have
been
in
such
a
state
of
punishment
.
"
Emma
knew
that
he
was
now
getting
to
the
Box
Hill
party
,
and
grew
uncomfortable
.
Her
own
behaviour
had
been
so
very
improper
!
She
was
deeply
ashamed
,
and
a
little
afraid
of
his
next
look
.
It
was
all
read
,
however
,
steadily
,
attentively
,
and
without
the
smallest
remark
;
and
,
excepting
one
momentary
glance
at
her
,
instantly
withdrawn
,
in
the
fear
of
giving
pain
--
no
remembrance
of
Box
Hill
seemed
to
exist
.
"
There
is
no
saying
much
for
the
delicacy
of
our
good
friends
,
the
Eltons
,
"
was
his
next
observation
.
--
"
His
feelings
are
natural
.
--
What
!
actually
resolve
to
break
with
him
entirely
!
--
She
felt
the
engagement
to
be
a
source
of
repentance
and
misery
to
each
--
she
dissolved
it
.
--
What
a
view
this
gives
of
her
sense
of
his
behaviour
!
--
Well
,
he
must
be
a
most
extraordinary
--
"