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How
she
could
have
been
so
deceived
!
--
He
protested
that
he
had
never
thought
seriously
of
Harriet
--
never
!
She
looked
back
as
well
as
she
could
;
but
it
was
all
confusion
.
She
had
taken
up
the
idea
,
she
supposed
,
and
made
every
thing
bend
to
it
.
His
manners
,
however
,
must
have
been
unmarked
,
wavering
,
dubious
,
or
she
could
not
have
been
so
misled
.
The
picture
!
--
How
eager
he
had
been
about
the
picture
!
--
and
the
charade
!
--
and
an
hundred
other
circumstances
--
how
clearly
they
had
seemed
to
point
at
Harriet
.
To
be
sure
,
the
charade
,
with
its
"
ready
wit
"
--
but
then
the
"
soft
eyes
"
--
in
fact
it
suited
neither
;
it
was
a
jumble
without
taste
or
truth
.
Who
could
have
seen
through
such
thick-headed
nonsense
?
Certainly
she
had
often
,
especially
of
late
,
thought
his
manners
to
herself
unnecessarily
gallant
;
but
it
had
passed
as
his
way
,
as
a
mere
error
of
judgment
,
of
knowledge
,
of
taste
,
as
one
proof
among
others
that
he
had
not
always
lived
in
the
best
society
,
that
with
all
the
gentleness
of
his
address
,
true
elegance
was
sometimes
wanting
;
but
,
till
this
very
day
,
she
had
never
,
for
an
instant
,
suspected
it
to
mean
any
thing
but
grateful
respect
to
her
as
Harriet
's
friend
.
To
Mr.
John
Knightley
was
she
indebted
for
her
first
idea
on
the
subject
,
for
the
first
start
of
its
possibility
.
There
was
no
denying
that
those
brothers
had
penetration
.
She
remembered
what
Mr.
Knightley
had
once
said
to
her
about
Mr.
Elton
,
the
caution
he
had
given
,
the
conviction
he
had
professed
that
Mr.
Elton
would
never
marry
indiscreetly
;
and
blushed
to
think
how
much
truer
a
knowledge
of
his
character
had
been
there
shewn
than
any
she
had
reached
herself
.
It
was
dreadfully
mortifying
;
but
Mr.
Elton
was
proving
himself
,
in
many
respects
,
the
very
reverse
of
what
she
had
meant
and
believed
him
;
proud
,
assuming
,
conceited
;
very
full
of
his
own
claims
,
and
little
concerned
about
the
feelings
of
others
.
Contrary
to
the
usual
course
of
things
,
Mr.
Elton
's
wanting
to
pay
his
addresses
to
her
had
sunk
him
in
her
opinion
.
His
professions
and
his
proposals
did
him
no
service
.
She
thought
nothing
of
his
attachment
,
and
was
insulted
by
his
hopes
.
He
wanted
to
marry
well
,
and
having
the
arrogance
to
raise
his
eyes
to
her
,
pretended
to
be
in
love
;
but
she
was
perfectly
easy
as
to
his
not
suffering
any
disappointment
that
need
be
cared
for
.
There
had
been
no
real
affection
either
in
his
language
or
manners
.
Sighs
and
fine
words
had
been
given
in
abundance
;
but
she
could
hardly
devise
any
set
of
expressions
,
or
fancy
any
tone
of
voice
,
less
allied
with
real
love
.
She
need
not
trouble
herself
to
pity
him
.
He
only
wanted
to
aggrandise
and
enrich
himself
;
and
if
Miss
Woodhouse
of
Hartfield
,
the
heiress
of
thirty
thousand
pounds
,
were
not
quite
so
easily
obtained
as
he
had
fancied
,
he
would
soon
try
for
Miss
Somebody
else
with
twenty
,
or
with
ten
.
But
--
that
he
should
talk
of
encouragement
,
should
consider
her
as
aware
of
his
views
,
accepting
his
attentions
,
meaning
(
in
short
)
,
to
marry
him
!
--
should
suppose
himself
her
equal
in
connexion
or
mind
!
--
look
down
upon
her
friend
,
so
well
understanding
the
gradations
of
rank
below
him
,
and
be
so
blind
to
what
rose
above
,
as
to
fancy
himself
shewing
no
presumption
in
addressing
her
!
--
It
was
most
provoking
.
Perhaps
it
was
not
fair
to
expect
him
to
feel
how
very
much
he
was
her
inferior
in
talent
,
and
all
the
elegancies
of
mind
.
The
very
want
of
such
equality
might
prevent
his
perception
of
it
;
but
he
must
know
that
in
fortune
and
consequence
she
was
greatly
his
superior
.
He
must
know
that
the
Woodhouses
had
been
settled
for
several
generations
at
Hartfield
,
the
younger
branch
of
a
very
ancient
family
--
and
that
the
Eltons
were
nobody
.
The
landed
property
of
Hartfield
certainly
was
inconsiderable
,
being
but
a
sort
of
notch
in
the
Donwell
Abbey
estate
,
to
which
all
the
rest
of
Highbury
belonged
;
but
their
fortune
,
from
other
sources
,
was
such
as
to
make
them
scarcely
secondary
to
Donwell
Abbey
itself
,
in
every
other
kind
of
consequence
;
and
the
Woodhouses
had
long
held
a
high
place
in
the
consideration
of
the
neighbourhood
which
Mr.
Elton
had
first
entered
not
two
years
ago
,
to
make
his
way
as
he
could
,
without
any
alliances
but
in
trade
,
or
any
thing
to
recommend
him
to
notice
but
his
situation
and
his
civility
.
--
But
he
had
fancied
her
in
love
with
him
;
that
evidently
must
have
been
his
dependence
;
and
after
raving
a
little
about
the
seeming
incongruity
of
gentle
manners
and
a
conceited
head
,
Emma
was
obliged
in
common
honesty
to
stop
and
admit
that
her
own
behaviour
to
him
had
been
so
complaisant
and
obliging
,
so
full
of
courtesy
and
attention
,
as
(
supposing
her
real
motive
unperceived
)
might
warrant
a
man
of
ordinary
observation
and
delicacy
,
like
Mr.
Elton
,
in
fancying
himself
a
very
decided
favourite
.
If
she
had
so
misinterpreted
his
feelings
,
she
had
little
right
to
wonder
that
he
,
with
self-interest
to
blind
him
,
should
have
mistaken
hers
.