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She
checked
herself
,
however
,
and
submitted
quietly
to
a
little
more
praise
than
she
deserved
.
Their
conversation
was
soon
afterwards
closed
by
the
entrance
of
her
father
.
She
was
not
sorry
.
She
wanted
to
be
alone
.
Her
mind
was
in
a
state
of
flutter
and
wonder
,
which
made
it
impossible
for
her
to
be
collected
.
She
was
in
dancing
,
singing
,
exclaiming
spirits
;
and
till
she
had
moved
about
,
and
talked
to
herself
,
and
laughed
and
reflected
,
she
could
be
fit
for
nothing
rational
.
Her
father
's
business
was
to
announce
James
's
being
gone
out
to
put
the
horses
to
,
preparatory
to
their
now
daily
drive
to
Randalls
;
and
she
had
,
therefore
,
an
immediate
excuse
for
disappearing
.
The
joy
,
the
gratitude
,
the
exquisite
delight
of
her
sensations
may
be
imagined
.
The
sole
grievance
and
alloy
thus
removed
in
the
prospect
of
Harriet
's
welfare
,
she
was
really
in
danger
of
becoming
too
happy
for
security
.
--
What
had
she
to
wish
for
?
Nothing
,
but
to
grow
more
worthy
of
him
,
whose
intentions
and
judgment
had
been
ever
so
superior
to
her
own
.
Nothing
,
but
that
the
lessons
of
her
past
folly
might
teach
her
humility
and
circumspection
in
future
.
Serious
she
was
,
very
serious
in
her
thankfulness
,
and
in
her
resolutions
;
and
yet
there
was
no
preventing
a
laugh
,
sometimes
in
the
very
midst
of
them
.
She
must
laugh
at
such
a
close
!
Such
an
end
of
the
doleful
disappointment
of
five
weeks
back
!
Such
a
heart
--
such
a
Harriet
!
Now
there
would
be
pleasure
in
her
returning
--
Every
thing
would
be
a
pleasure
.
It
would
be
a
great
pleasure
to
know
Robert
Martin
.
High
in
the
rank
of
her
most
serious
and
heartfelt
felicities
,
was
the
reflection
that
all
necessity
of
concealment
from
Mr.
Knightley
would
soon
be
over
.
The
disguise
,
equivocation
,
mystery
,
so
hateful
to
her
to
practise
,
might
soon
be
over
.
She
could
now
look
forward
to
giving
him
that
full
and
perfect
confidence
which
her
disposition
was
most
ready
to
welcome
as
a
duty
.
In
the
gayest
and
happiest
spirits
she
set
forward
with
her
father
;
not
always
listening
,
but
always
agreeing
to
what
he
said
;
and
,
whether
in
speech
or
silence
,
conniving
at
the
comfortable
persuasion
of
his
being
obliged
to
go
to
Randalls
every
day
,
or
poor
Mrs.
Weston
would
be
disappointed
.
They
arrived
.
--
Mrs.
Weston
was
alone
in
the
drawing-room
:
--
but
hardly
had
they
been
told
of
the
baby
,
and
Mr.
Woodhouse
received
the
thanks
for
coming
,
which
he
asked
for
,
when
a
glimpse
was
caught
through
the
blind
,
of
two
figures
passing
near
the
window
.
"
It
is
Frank
and
Miss
Fairfax
,
"
said
Mrs.
Weston
.
"
I
was
just
going
to
tell
you
of
our
agreeable
surprize
in
seeing
him
arrive
this
morning
.
He
stays
till
to-morrow
,
and
Miss
Fairfax
has
been
persuaded
to
spend
the
day
with
us
.
--
They
are
coming
in
,
I
hope
.
"