The hair was curled, and the maid
sent away, and Emma sat down to think and be miserable.—It
was a wretched business indeed!—Such an
overthrow of every thing she had been wishing for!—Such
a development of every thing most unwelcome!—Such
a blow for Harriet!—that was the worst
of all. Every part of it brought pain and humiliation,
of some sort or other; but, compared with the evil
to Harriet, all was light; and she would gladly have
submitted to feel yet more mistaken— more
in error—more disgraced by mis-judgment,
than she actually was, could the effects of her blunders
have been confined to herself.
“If I had not persuaded Harriet
into liking the man, I could have borne any thing.
He might have doubled his presumption to me—
but poor Harriet!”
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.
The first error and the worst lay
at her door. It was foolish, it was wrong, to
take so active a part in bringing any two people together.
It was adventuring too far, assuming too much, making
light of what ought to be serious, a trick of what
ought to be simple. She was quite concerned
and ashamed, and resolved to do such things no more.
“Here have I,” said she,
“actually talked poor Harriet into being very
much attached to this man. She might never have
thought of him but for me; and certainly never would
have thought of him with hope, if I had not assured
her of his attachment, for she is as modest and humble
as I used to think him. Oh! that I had been satisfied
with persuading her not to accept young Martin.
There I was quite right. That was well done
of me; but there I should have stopped, and left the
rest to time and chance. I was introducing her
into good company, and giving her the opportunity
of pleasing some one worth having; I ought not to
have attempted more. But now, poor girl, her
peace is cut up for some time. I have been but
half a friend to her; and if she were not to
feel this disappointment so very much, I am sure I
have not an idea of any body else who would be at all
desirable for her;—William Coxe—Oh!
no, I could not endure William Coxe— a
pert young lawyer.”
She stopt to blush and laugh at her
own relapse, and then resumed a more serious, more
dispiriting cogitation upon what had been, and might
be, and must be. The distressing explanation
she had to make to Harriet, and all that poor Harriet
would be suffering, with the awkwardness of future
meetings, the difficulties of continuing or discontinuing
the acquaintance, of subduing feelings, concealing
resentment, and avoiding eclat, were enough to occupy
her in most unmirthful reflections some time longer,
and she went to bed at last with nothing settled but
the conviction of her having blundered most dreadfully.
To youth and natural cheerfulness
like Emma’s, though under temporary gloom at
night, the return of day will hardly fail to bring
return of spirits. The youth and cheerfulness
of morning are in happy analogy, and of powerful operation;
and if the distress be not poignant enough to keep
the eyes unclosed, they will be sure to open to sensations
of softened pain and brighter hope.
Emma got up on the morrow more disposed
for comfort than she had gone to bed, more ready to
see alleviations of the evil before her, and to depend
on getting tolerably out of it.
It was a great consolation that Mr.
Elton should not be really in love with her, or so
particularly amiable as to make it shocking to disappoint
him—that Harriet’s nature should not
be of that superior sort in which the feelings are
most acute and retentive— and that there
could be no necessity for any body’s knowing
what had passed except the three principals, and especially
for her father’s being given a moment’s
uneasiness about it.
These were very cheering thoughts;
and the sight of a great deal of snow on the ground
did her further service, for any thing was welcome
that might justify their all three being quite asunder
at present.
The weather was most favourable for
her; though Christmas Day, she could not go to church.
Mr. Woodhouse would have been miserable had his daughter
attempted it, and she was therefore safe from either
exciting or receiving unpleasant and most unsuitable
ideas. The ground covered with snow, and the
atmosphere in that unsettled state between frost and
thaw, which is of all others the most unfriendly for
exercise, every morning beginning in rain or snow,
and every evening setting in to freeze, she was for
many days a most honourable prisoner. No intercourse
with Harriet possible but by note; no church for her
on Sunday any more than on Christmas Day; and no need
to find excuses for Mr. Elton’s absenting himself.
It was weather which might fairly
confine every body at home; and though she hoped and
believed him to be really taking comfort in some society
or other, it was very pleasant to have her father
so well satisfied with his being all alone in his own
house, too wise to stir out; and to hear him say to
Mr. Knightley, whom no weather could keep entirely
from them,—
“Ah! Mr. Knightley, why
do not you stay at home like poor Mr. Elton?”
These days of confinement would have
been, but for her private perplexities, remarkably
comfortable, as such seclusion exactly suited her
brother, whose feelings must always be of great importance
to his companions; and he had, besides, so thoroughly
cleared off his ill-humour at Randalls, that his amiableness
never failed him during the rest of his stay at Hartfield.
He was always agreeable and obliging, and speaking
pleasantly of every body. But with all the hopes
of cheerfulness, and all the present comfort of delay,
there was still such an evil hanging over her in the
hour of explanation with Harriet, as made it impossible
for Emma to be ever perfectly at ease.