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341
"
You
saw
her
answer
!
--
you
wrote
her
answer
too
.
Emma
,
this
is
your
doing
.
You
persuaded
her
to
refuse
him
.
"
342
"
And
if
I
did
,
(
which
,
however
,
I
am
far
from
allowing
)
I
should
not
feel
that
I
had
done
wrong
.
Mr.
Martin
is
a
very
respectable
young
man
,
but
I
can
not
admit
him
to
be
Harriet
's
equal
;
and
am
rather
surprized
indeed
that
he
should
have
ventured
to
address
her
.
By
your
account
,
he
does
seem
to
have
had
some
scruples
.
It
is
a
pity
that
they
were
ever
got
over
.
"
343
"
Not
Harriet
's
equal
!
"
exclaimed
Mr.
Knightley
loudly
and
warmly
;
and
with
calmer
asperity
,
added
,
a
few
moments
afterwards
,
"
No
,
he
is
not
her
equal
indeed
,
for
he
is
as
much
her
superior
in
sense
as
in
situation
.
Emma
,
your
infatuation
about
that
girl
blinds
you
.
What
are
Harriet
Smith
's
claims
,
either
of
birth
,
nature
or
education
,
to
any
connexion
higher
than
Robert
Martin
?
She
is
the
natural
daughter
of
nobody
knows
whom
,
with
probably
no
settled
provision
at
all
,
and
certainly
no
respectable
relations
.
She
is
known
only
as
parlour-boarder
at
a
common
school
.
She
is
not
a
sensible
girl
,
nor
a
girl
of
any
information
.
She
has
been
taught
nothing
useful
,
and
is
too
young
and
too
simple
to
have
acquired
any
thing
herself
.
At
her
age
she
can
have
no
experience
,
and
with
her
little
wit
,
is
not
very
likely
ever
to
have
any
that
can
avail
her
.
She
is
pretty
,
and
she
is
good
tempered
,
and
that
is
all
.
Отключить рекламу
344
My
only
scruple
in
advising
the
match
was
on
his
account
,
as
being
beneath
his
deserts
,
and
a
bad
connexion
for
him
.
I
felt
that
,
as
to
fortune
,
in
all
probability
he
might
do
much
better
;
and
that
as
to
a
rational
companion
or
useful
helpmate
,
he
could
not
do
worse
.
But
I
could
not
reason
so
to
a
man
in
love
,
and
was
willing
to
trust
to
there
being
no
harm
in
her
,
to
her
having
that
sort
of
disposition
,
which
,
in
good
hands
,
like
his
,
might
be
easily
led
aright
and
turn
out
very
well
.
The
advantage
of
the
match
I
felt
to
be
all
on
her
side
;
and
had
not
the
smallest
doubt
(
nor
have
I
now
)
that
there
would
be
a
general
cry-out
upon
her
extreme
good
luck
.
Even
your
satisfaction
I
made
sure
of
.
It
crossed
my
mind
immediately
that
you
would
not
regret
your
friend
's
leaving
Highbury
,
for
the
sake
of
her
being
settled
so
well
.
I
remember
saying
to
myself
,
'
Even
Emma
,
with
all
her
partiality
for
Harriet
,
will
think
this
a
good
match
.
'
"
345
"
I
can
not
help
wondering
at
your
knowing
so
little
of
Emma
as
to
say
any
such
thing
.
What
!
think
a
farmer
,
(
and
with
all
his
sense
and
all
his
merit
Mr.
Martin
is
nothing
more
,
)
a
good
match
for
my
intimate
friend
!
Not
regret
her
leaving
Highbury
for
the
sake
of
marrying
a
man
whom
I
could
never
admit
as
an
acquaintance
of
my
own
!
I
wonder
you
should
think
it
possible
for
me
to
have
such
feelings
.
I
assure
you
mine
are
very
different
.
I
must
think
your
statement
by
no
means
fair
.
You
are
not
just
to
Harriet
's
claims
.
They
would
be
estimated
very
differently
by
others
as
well
as
myself
;
Mr.
346
Martin
may
be
the
richest
of
the
two
,
but
he
is
undoubtedly
her
inferior
as
to
rank
in
society
.
--
The
sphere
in
which
she
moves
is
much
above
his
.
--
It
would
be
a
degradation
.
"
347
"
A
degradation
to
illegitimacy
and
ignorance
,
to
be
married
to
a
respectable
,
intelligent
gentleman-farmer
!
"
Отключить рекламу
348
"
As
to
the
circumstances
of
her
birth
,
though
in
a
legal
sense
she
may
be
called
Nobody
,
it
will
not
hold
in
common
sense
.
She
is
not
to
pay
for
the
offence
of
others
,
by
being
held
below
the
level
of
those
with
whom
she
is
brought
up
.
--
There
can
scarcely
be
a
doubt
that
her
father
is
a
gentleman
--
and
a
gentleman
of
fortune
.
--
Her
allowance
is
very
liberal
;
nothing
has
ever
been
grudged
for
her
improvement
or
comfort
.
--
That
she
is
a
gentleman
's
daughter
,
is
indubitable
to
me
;
that
she
associates
with
gentlemen
's
daughters
,
no
one
,
I
apprehend
,
will
deny
.
--
She
is
superior
to
Mr.
Robert
Martin
.
"
349
"
Whoever
might
be
her
parents
,
"
said
Mr.
Knightley
,
"
whoever
may
have
had
the
charge
of
her
,
it
does
not
appear
to
have
been
any
part
of
their
plan
to
introduce
her
into
what
you
would
call
good
society
.
After
receiving
a
very
indifferent
education
she
is
left
in
Mrs.
Goddard
's
hands
to
shift
as
she
can
--
to
move
,
in
short
,
in
Mrs.
Goddard
's
line
,
to
have
Mrs.
Goddard
's
acquaintance
.
Her
friends
evidently
thought
this
good
enough
for
her
;
and
it
was
good
enough
.
She
desired
nothing
better
herself
.
350
Till
you
chose
to
turn
her
into
a
friend
,
her
mind
had
no
distaste
for
her
own
set
,
nor
any
ambition
beyond
it
.
She
was
as
happy
as
possible
with
the
Martins
in
the
summer
.
She
had
no
sense
of
superiority
then
.
If
she
has
it
now
,
you
have
given
it
.
You
have
been
no
friend
to
Harriet
Smith
,
Emma
.
Robert
Martin
would
never
have
proceeded
so
far
,
if
he
had
not
felt
persuaded
of
her
not
being
disinclined
to
him
.
I
know
him
well
.
He
has
too
much
real
feeling
to
address
any
woman
on
the
haphazard
of
selfish
passion
.
And
as
to
conceit
,
he
is
the
farthest
from
it
of
any
man
I
know
.
Depend
upon
it
he
had
encouragement
.
"