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<h2> CHAPTER XIV </h2>
<p>What totally different feelings did Emma take back into the house from
what she had brought out!—she had then been only daring to hope for
a little respite of suffering;—she was now in an exquisite flutter
of happiness, and such happiness moreover as she believed must still be
greater when the flutter should have passed away.</p>
<p>They sat down to tea—the same party round the same table—how
often it had been collected!—and how often had her eyes fallen on
the same shrubs in the lawn, and observed the same beautiful effect of the
western sun!—But never in such a state of spirits, never in any
thing like it; and it was with difficulty that she could summon enough of
her usual self to be the attentive lady of the house, or even the
attentive daughter.</p>
<p>Poor Mr. Woodhouse little suspected what was plotting against him in the
breast of that man whom he was so cordially welcoming, and so anxiously
hoping might not have taken cold from his ride.—Could he have seen
the heart, he would have cared very little for the lungs; but without the
most distant imagination of the impending evil, without the slightest
perception of any thing extraordinary in the looks or ways of either, he
repeated to them very comfortably all the articles of news he had received
from Mr. Perry, and talked on with much self-contentment, totally
unsuspicious of what they could have told him in return.</p>
<p>As long as Mr. Knightley remained with them, Emma's fever continued; but
when he was gone, she began to be a little tranquillised and subdued—and
in the course of the sleepless night, which was the tax for such an
evening, she found one or two such very serious points to consider, as
made her feel, that even her happiness must have some alloy. Her father—and
Harriet. She could not be alone without feeling the full weight of their
separate claims; and how to guard the comfort of both to the utmost, was
the question. With respect to her father, it was a question soon answered.
She hardly knew yet what Mr. Knightley would ask; but a very short parley
with her own heart produced the most solemn resolution of never quitting
her father.—She even wept over the idea of it, as a sin of thought.
While he lived, it must be only an engagement; but she flattered herself,
that if divested of the danger of drawing her away, it might become an
increase of comfort to him.—How to do her best by Harriet, was of
more difficult decision;—how to spare her from any unnecessary pain;
how to make her any possible atonement; how to appear least her enemy?—On
these subjects, her perplexity and distress were very great—and her
mind had to pass again and again through every bitter reproach and
sorrowful regret that had ever surrounded it.—She could only resolve
at last, that she would still avoid a meeting with her, and communicate
all that need be told by letter; that it would be inexpressibly desirable
to have her removed just now for a time from Highbury, and—indulging
in one scheme more—nearly resolve, that it might be practicable to
get an invitation for her to Brunswick Square.—Isabella had been
pleased with Harriet; and a few weeks spent in London must give her some
amusement.—She did not think it in Harriet's nature to escape being
benefited by novelty and variety, by the streets, the shops, and the
children.—At any rate, it would be a proof of attention and kindness
in herself, from whom every thing was due; a separation for the present;
an averting of the evil day, when they must all be together again.</p>
<p>She rose early, and wrote her letter to Harriet; an employment which left
her so very serious, so nearly sad, that Mr. Knightley, in walking up to
Hartfield to breakfast, did not arrive at all too soon; and half an hour
stolen afterwards to go over the same ground again with him, literally and
figuratively, was quite necessary to reinstate her in a proper share of
the happiness of the evening before.</p>
<p>He had not left her long, by no means long enough for her to have the
slightest inclination for thinking of any body else, when a letter was
brought her from Randalls—a very thick letter;—she guessed
what it must contain, and deprecated the necessity of reading it.—She
was now in perfect charity with Frank Churchill; she wanted no
explanations, she wanted only to have her thoughts to herself—and as
for understanding any thing he wrote, she was sure she was incapable of
it.—It must be waded through, however. She opened the packet; it was
too surely so;—a note from Mrs. Weston to herself, ushered in the
letter from Frank to Mrs. Weston.</p>
<p>"I have the greatest pleasure, my dear Emma, in forwarding to you the
enclosed. I know what thorough justice you will do it, and have scarcely a
doubt of its happy effect.—I think we shall never materially
disagree about the writer again; but I will not delay you by a long
preface.—We are quite well.—This letter has been the cure of
all the little nervousness I have been feeling lately.—I did not
quite like your looks on Tuesday, but it was an ungenial morning; and
though you will never own being affected by weather, I think every body
feels a north-east wind.—I felt for your dear father very much in
the storm of Tuesday afternoon and yesterday morning, but had the comfort
of hearing last night, by Mr. Perry, that it had not made him ill.</p>
<p>"Yours ever,<br/>
"A. W."<br/>
<br/>
[To Mrs. Weston.]<br/></p>
<p>WINDSOR-JULY.<br/>
MY DEAR MADAM,<br/></p>
<p>"If I made myself intelligible yesterday, this letter will be expected;
but expected or not, I know it will be read with candour and indulgence.—You
are all goodness, and I believe there will be need of even all your
goodness to allow for some parts of my past conduct.—But I have been
forgiven by one who had still more to resent. My courage rises while I
write. It is very difficult for the prosperous to be humble. I have
already met with such success in two applications for pardon, that I may
be in danger of thinking myself too sure of yours, and of those among your
friends who have had any ground of offence.—You must all endeavour
to comprehend the exact nature of my situation when I first arrived at
Randalls; you must consider me as having a secret which was to be kept at
all hazards. This was the fact. My right to place myself in a situation
requiring such concealment, is another question. I shall not discuss it
here. For my temptation to <i>think</i> it a right, I refer every caviller
to a brick house, sashed windows below, and casements above, in Highbury.
I dared not address her openly; my difficulties in the then state of
Enscombe must be too well known to require definition; and I was fortunate
enough to prevail, before we parted at Weymouth, and to induce the most
upright female mind in the creation to stoop in charity to a secret
engagement.—Had she refused, I should have gone mad.—But you
will be ready to say, what was your hope in doing this?—What did you
look forward to?—To any thing, every thing—to time, chance,
circumstance, slow effects, sudden bursts, perseverance and weariness,
health and sickness. Every possibility of good was before me, and the
first of blessings secured, in obtaining her promises of faith and
correspondence. If you need farther explanation, I have the honour, my
dear madam, of being your husband's son, and the advantage of inheriting a
disposition to hope for good, which no inheritance of houses or lands can
ever equal the value of.—See me, then, under these circumstances,
arriving on my first visit to Randalls;—and here I am conscious of
wrong, for that visit might have been sooner paid. You will look back and
see that I did not come till Miss Fairfax was in Highbury; and as <i>you</i>
were the person slighted, you will forgive me instantly; but I must work
on my father's compassion, by reminding him, that so long as I absented
myself from his house, so long I lost the blessing of knowing you. My
behaviour, during the very happy fortnight which I spent with you, did
not, I hope, lay me open to reprehension, excepting on one point. And now
I come to the principal, the only important part of my conduct while
belonging to you, which excites my own anxiety, or requires very
solicitous explanation. With the greatest respect, and the warmest
friendship, do I mention Miss Woodhouse; my father perhaps will think I
ought to add, with the deepest humiliation.—A few words which
dropped from him yesterday spoke his opinion, and some censure I
acknowledge myself liable to.—My behaviour to Miss Woodhouse
indicated, I believe, more than it ought.—In order to assist a
concealment so essential to me, I was led on to make more than an
allowable use of the sort of intimacy into which we were immediately
thrown.—I cannot deny that Miss Woodhouse was my ostensible object—but
I am sure you will believe the declaration, that had I not been convinced
of her indifference, I would not have been induced by any selfish views to
go on.—Amiable and delightful as Miss Woodhouse is, she never gave
me the idea of a young woman likely to be attached; and that she was
perfectly free from any tendency to being attached to me, was as much my
conviction as my wish.—She received my attentions with an easy,
friendly, goodhumoured playfulness, which exactly suited me. We seemed to
understand each other. From our relative situation, those attentions were
her due, and were felt to be so.—Whether Miss Woodhouse began really
to understand me before the expiration of that fortnight, I cannot say;—when
I called to take leave of her, I remember that I was within a moment of
confessing the truth, and I then fancied she was not without suspicion;
but I have no doubt of her having since detected me, at least in some
degree.—She may not have surmised the whole, but her quickness must
have penetrated a part. I cannot doubt it. You will find, whenever the
subject becomes freed from its present restraints, that it did not take
her wholly by surprize. She frequently gave me hints of it. I remember her
telling me at the ball, that I owed Mrs. Elton gratitude for her
attentions to Miss Fairfax.—I hope this history of my conduct
towards her will be admitted by you and my father as great extenuation of
what you saw amiss. While you considered me as having sinned against Emma
Woodhouse, I could deserve nothing from either. Acquit me here, and
procure for me, when it is allowable, the acquittal and good wishes of
that said Emma Woodhouse, whom I regard with so much brotherly affection,
as to long to have her as deeply and as happily in love as myself.—Whatever
strange things I said or did during that fortnight, you have now a key to.
My heart was in Highbury, and my business was to get my body thither as
often as might be, and with the least suspicion. If you remember any
queernesses, set them all to the right account.—Of the pianoforte so
much talked of, I feel it only necessary to say, that its being ordered
was absolutely unknown to Miss F—, who would never have allowed me
to send it, had any choice been given her.—The delicacy of her mind
throughout the whole engagement, my dear madam, is much beyond my power of
doing justice to. You will soon, I earnestly hope, know her thoroughly
yourself.—No description can describe her. She must tell you herself
what she is—yet not by word, for never was there a human creature
who would so designedly suppress her own merit.—Since I began this
letter, which will be longer than I foresaw, I have heard from her.—She
gives a good account of her own health; but as she never complains, I dare
not depend. I want to have your opinion of her looks. I know you will soon
call on her; she is living in dread of the visit. Perhaps it is paid
already. Let me hear from you without delay; I am impatient for a thousand
particulars. Remember how few minutes I was at Randalls, and in how
bewildered, how mad a state: and I am not much better yet; still insane
either from happiness or misery. When I think of the kindness and favour I
have met with, of her excellence and patience, and my uncle's generosity,
I am mad with joy: but when I recollect all the uneasiness I occasioned
her, and how little I deserve to be forgiven, I am mad with anger. If I
could but see her again!—But I must not propose it yet. My uncle has
been too good for me to encroach.—I must still add to this long
letter. You have not heard all that you ought to hear. I could not give
any connected detail yesterday; but the suddenness, and, in one light, the
unseasonableness with which the affair burst out, needs explanation; for
though the event of the 26th ult., as you will conclude, immediately
opened to me the happiest prospects, I should not have presumed on such
early measures, but from the very particular circumstances, which left me
not an hour to lose. I should myself have shrunk from any thing so hasty,
and she would have felt every scruple of mine with multiplied strength and
refinement.—But I had no choice. The hasty engagement she had
entered into with that woman—Here, my dear madam, I was obliged to
leave off abruptly, to recollect and compose myself.—I have been
walking over the country, and am now, I hope, rational enough to make the
rest of my letter what it ought to be.—It is, in fact, a most
mortifying retrospect for me. I behaved shamefully. And here I can admit,
that my manners to Miss W., in being unpleasant to Miss F., were highly
blameable. <i>She</i> disapproved them, which ought to have been enough.—My
plea of concealing the truth she did not think sufficient.—She was
displeased; I thought unreasonably so: I thought her, on a thousand
occasions, unnecessarily scrupulous and cautious: I thought her even cold.
But she was always right. If I had followed her judgment, and subdued my
spirits to the level of what she deemed proper, I should have escaped the
greatest unhappiness I have ever known.—We quarrelled.— Do you
remember the morning spent at Donwell?—<i>There</i> every little
dissatisfaction that had occurred before came to a crisis. I was late; I
met her walking home by herself, and wanted to walk with her, but she
would not suffer it. She absolutely refused to allow me, which I then
thought most unreasonable. Now, however, I see nothing in it but a very
natural and consistent degree of discretion. While I, to blind the world
to our engagement, was behaving one hour with objectionable particularity
to another woman, was she to be consenting the next to a proposal which
might have made every previous caution useless?—Had we been met
walking together between Donwell and Highbury, the truth must have been
suspected.—I was mad enough, however, to resent.—I doubted her
affection. I doubted it more the next day on Box Hill; when, provoked by
such conduct on my side, such shameful, insolent neglect of her, and such
apparent devotion to Miss W., as it would have been impossible for any
woman of sense to endure, she spoke her resentment in a form of words
perfectly intelligible to me.—In short, my dear madam, it was a
quarrel blameless on her side, abominable on mine; and I returned the same
evening to Richmond, though I might have staid with you till the next
morning, merely because I would be as angry with her as possible. Even
then, I was not such a fool as not to mean to be reconciled in time; but I
was the injured person, injured by her coldness, and I went away
determined that she should make the first advances.—I shall always
congratulate myself that you were not of the Box Hill party. Had you
witnessed my behaviour there, I can hardly suppose you would ever have
thought well of me again. Its effect upon her appears in the immediate
resolution it produced: as soon as she found I was really gone from
Randalls, she closed with the offer of that officious Mrs. Elton; the
whole system of whose treatment of her, by the bye, has ever filled me
with indignation and hatred. I must not quarrel with a spirit of
forbearance which has been so richly extended towards myself; but,
otherwise, I should loudly protest against the share of it which that
woman has known.—'Jane,' indeed!—You will observe that I have
not yet indulged myself in calling her by that name, even to you. Think,
then, what I must have endured in hearing it bandied between the Eltons
with all the vulgarity of needless repetition, and all the insolence of
imaginary superiority. Have patience with me, I shall soon have done.—She
closed with this offer, resolving to break with me entirely, and wrote the
next day to tell me that we never were to meet again.—<i>She</i> <i>felt</i>
<i>the</i> <i>engagement</i> <i>to</i> <i>be</i> <i>a</i> <i>source</i> <i>of</i>
<i>repentance</i> <i>and</i> <i>misery</i> <i>to</i> <i>each</i>: <i>she</i>
<i>dissolved</i> <i>it</i>.—This letter reached me on the very
morning of my poor aunt's death. I answered it within an hour; but from
the confusion of my mind, and the multiplicity of business falling on me
at once, my answer, instead of being sent with all the many other letters
of that day, was locked up in my writing-desk; and I, trusting that I had
written enough, though but a few lines, to satisfy her, remained without
any uneasiness.—I was rather disappointed that I did not hear from
her again speedily; but I made excuses for her, and was too busy, and—may
I add?—too cheerful in my views to be captious.—We removed to
Windsor; and two days afterwards I received a parcel from her, my own
letters all returned!—and a few lines at the same time by the post,
stating her extreme surprize at not having had the smallest reply to her
last; and adding, that as silence on such a point could not be
misconstrued, and as it must be equally desirable to both to have every
subordinate arrangement concluded as soon as possible, she now sent me, by
a safe conveyance, all my letters, and requested, that if I could not
directly command hers, so as to send them to Highbury within a week, I
would forward them after that period to her at—: in short, the full
direction to Mr. Smallridge's, near Bristol, stared me in the face. I knew
the name, the place, I knew all about it, and instantly saw what she had
been doing. It was perfectly accordant with that resolution of character
which I knew her to possess; and the secrecy she had maintained, as to any
such design in her former letter, was equally descriptive of its anxious
delicacy. For the world would not she have seemed to threaten me.—Imagine
the shock; imagine how, till I had actually detected my own blunder, I
raved at the blunders of the post.—What was to be done?—One
thing only.—I must speak to my uncle. Without his sanction I could
not hope to be listened to again.—I spoke; circumstances were in my
favour; the late event had softened away his pride, and he was, earlier
than I could have anticipated, wholly reconciled and complying; and could
say at last, poor man! with a deep sigh, that he wished I might find as
much happiness in the marriage state as he had done.—I felt that it
would be of a different sort.—Are you disposed to pity me for what I
must have suffered in opening the cause to him, for my suspense while all
was at stake?—No; do not pity me till I reached Highbury, and saw
how ill I had made her. Do not pity me till I saw her wan, sick looks.—I
reached Highbury at the time of day when, from my knowledge of their late
breakfast hour, I was certain of a good chance of finding her alone.—I
was not disappointed; and at last I was not disappointed either in the
object of my journey. A great deal of very reasonable, very just
displeasure I had to persuade away. But it is done; we are reconciled,
dearer, much dearer, than ever, and no moment's uneasiness can ever occur
between us again. Now, my dear madam, I will release you; but I could not
conclude before. A thousand and a thousand thanks for all the kindness you
have ever shewn me, and ten thousand for the attentions your heart will
dictate towards her.—If you think me in a way to be happier than I
deserve, I am quite of your opinion.—Miss W. calls me the child of
good fortune. I hope she is right.—In one respect, my good fortune
is undoubted, that of being able to subscribe myself,</p>
<p>Your obliged and affectionate Son,<br/>
<br/>
F. C. WESTON CHURCHILL.<br/></p>
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