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"
We
are
sure
of
excellent
fires
,
"
continued
he
,
"
and
every
thing
in
the
greatest
comfort
.
Charming
people
,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Weston
--
Mrs
Weston
indeed
is
much
beyond
praise
,
and
he
is
exactly
what
one
values
,
so
hospitable
,
and
so
fond
of
society
--
it
will
be
a
small
party
,
but
where
small
parties
are
select
,
they
are
perhaps
the
most
agreeable
of
any
.
Mr.
Weston
's
dining-room
does
not
accommodate
more
than
ten
comfortably
;
and
for
my
part
,
I
would
rather
,
under
such
circumstances
,
fall
short
by
two
than
exceed
by
two
.
I
think
you
will
agree
with
me
,
(
turning
with
a
soft
air
to
Emma
,
)
I
think
I
shall
certainly
have
your
approbation
,
though
Mr.
Knightley
perhaps
,
from
being
used
to
the
large
parties
of
London
,
may
not
quite
enter
into
our
feelings
.
"
"
I
know
nothing
of
the
large
parties
of
London
,
sir
--
I
never
dine
with
any
body
.
"
"
Indeed
!
(
in
a
tone
of
wonder
and
pity
,
)
I
had
no
idea
that
the
law
had
been
so
great
a
slavery
.
Well
,
sir
,
the
time
must
come
when
you
will
be
paid
for
all
this
,
when
you
will
have
little
labour
and
great
enjoyment
.
"
"
My
first
enjoyment
,
"
replied
John
Knightley
,
as
they
passed
through
the
sweep-gate
,
"
will
be
to
find
myself
safe
at
Hartfield
again
.
"
Some
change
of
countenance
was
necessary
for
each
gentleman
as
they
walked
into
Mrs.
Weston
's
drawing-room
--
Mr.
Elton
must
compose
his
joyous
looks
,
and
Mr.
John
Knightley
disperse
his
ill-humour
.
Mr.
Elton
must
smile
less
,
and
Mr.
John
Knightley
more
,
to
fit
them
for
the
place
.
--
Emma
only
might
be
as
nature
prompted
,
and
shew
herself
just
as
happy
as
she
was
.
To
her
it
was
real
enjoyment
to
be
with
the
Westons
.
Mr.
Weston
was
a
great
favourite
,
and
there
was
not
a
creature
in
the
world
to
whom
she
spoke
with
such
unreserve
,
as
to
his
wife
;
not
any
one
,
to
whom
she
related
with
such
conviction
of
being
listened
to
and
understood
,
of
being
always
interesting
and
always
intelligible
,
the
little
affairs
,
arrangements
,
perplexities
,
and
pleasures
of
her
father
and
herself
.
She
could
tell
nothing
of
Hartfield
,
in
which
Mrs.
Weston
had
not
a
lively
concern
;
and
half
an
hour
's
uninterrupted
communication
of
all
those
little
matters
on
which
the
daily
happiness
of
private
life
depends
,
was
one
of
the
first
gratifications
of
each
.
This
was
a
pleasure
which
perhaps
the
whole
day
's
visit
might
not
afford
,
which
certainly
did
not
belong
to
the
present
half-hour
;
but
the
very
sight
of
Mrs.
Weston
,
her
smile
,
her
touch
,
her
voice
was
grateful
to
Emma
,
and
she
determined
to
think
as
little
as
possible
of
Mr.
Elton
's
oddities
,
or
of
any
thing
else
unpleasant
,
and
enjoy
all
that
was
enjoyable
to
the
utmost
.
The
misfortune
of
Harriet
's
cold
had
been
pretty
well
gone
through
before
her
arrival
.
Mr.
Woodhouse
had
been
safely
seated
long
enough
to
give
the
history
of
it
,
besides
all
the
history
of
his
own
and
Isabella
's
coming
,
and
of
Emma
's
being
to
follow
,
and
had
indeed
just
got
to
the
end
of
his
satisfaction
that
James
should
come
and
see
his
daughter
,
when
the
others
appeared
,
and
Mrs.
Weston
,
who
had
been
almost
wholly
engrossed
by
her
attentions
to
him
,
was
able
to
turn
away
and
welcome
her
dear
Emma
.
Emma
's
project
of
forgetting
Mr.
Elton
for
a
while
made
her
rather
sorry
to
find
,
when
they
had
all
taken
their
places
,
that
he
was
close
to
her
.
The
difficulty
was
great
of
driving
his
strange
insensibility
towards
Harriet
,
from
her
mind
,
while
he
not
only
sat
at
her
elbow
,
but
was
continually
obtruding
his
happy
countenance
on
her
notice
,
and
solicitously
addressing
her
upon
every
occasion
.
Instead
of
forgetting
him
,
his
behaviour
was
such
that
she
could
not
avoid
the
internal
suggestion
of
"
Can
it
really
be
as
my
brother
imagined
?
can
it
be
possible
for
this
man
to
be
beginning
to
transfer
his
affections
from
Harriet
to
me
?
--
Absurd
and
insufferable
!
"
--
Yet
he
would
be
so
anxious
for
her
being
perfectly
warm
,
would
be
so
interested
about
her
father
,
and
so
delighted
with
Mrs.
Weston
;
and
at
last
would
begin
admiring
her
drawings
with
so
much
zeal
and
so
little
knowledge
as
seemed
terribly
like
a
would-be
lover
,
and
made
it
some
effort
with
her
to
preserve
her
good
manners
.