Mr. and Mrs. John Knightley were not
detained long at Hartfield. The weather soon
improved enough for those to move who must move; and
Mr. Woodhouse having, as usual, tried to persuade his
daughter to stay behind with all her children, was
obliged to see the whole party set off, and return
to his lamentations over the destiny of poor Isabella;—which
poor Isabella, passing her life with those she doated
on, full of their merits, blind to their faults, and
always innocently busy, might have been a model of
right feminine happiness.
The evening of the very day on which
they went brought a note from Mr. Elton to Mr. Woodhouse,
a long, civil, ceremonious note, to say, with Mr.
Elton’s best compliments, “that he was
proposing to leave Highbury the following morning
in his way to Bath; where, in compliance with the
pressing entreaties of some friends, he had engaged
to spend a few weeks, and very much regretted the
impossibility he was under, from various circumstances
of weather and business, of taking a personal leave
of Mr. Woodhouse, of whose friendly civilities he
should ever retain a grateful sense— and
had Mr. Woodhouse any commands, should be happy to
attend to them.”
Emma was most agreeably surprized.—Mr.
Elton’s absence just at this time was the very
thing to be desired. She admired him for contriving
it, though not able to give him much credit for the
manner in which it was announced. Resentment
could not have been more plainly spoken than in a
civility to her father, from which she was so pointedly
excluded. She had not even a share in his opening
compliments.—Her name was not mentioned;—
and there was so striking a change in all this, and
such an ill-judged solemnity of leave-taking in his
graceful acknowledgments, as she thought, at first,
could not escape her father’s suspicion.
It did, however.—Her father
was quite taken up with the surprize of so sudden
a journey, and his fears that Mr. Elton might never
get safely to the end of it, and saw nothing extraordinary
in his language. It was a very useful note, for
it supplied them with fresh matter for thought and
conversation during the rest of their lonely evening.
Mr. Woodhouse talked over his alarms, and Emma was
in spirits to persuade them away with all her usual
promptitude.
She now resolved to keep Harriet no
longer in the dark. She had reason to believe
her nearly recovered from her cold, and it was desirable
that she should have as much time as possible for getting
the better of her other complaint before the gentleman’s
return. She went to Mrs. Goddard’s accordingly
the very next day, to undergo the necessary penance
of communication; and a severe one it was.—
She had to destroy all the hopes which she had been
so industriously feeding—to appear in the
ungracious character of the one preferred—
and acknowledge herself grossly mistaken and mis-judging
in all her ideas on one subject, all her observations,
all her convictions, all her prophecies for the last
six weeks.
The confession completely renewed
her first shame—and the sight of Harriet’s
tears made her think that she should never be in charity
with herself again.
Harriet bore the intelligence very
well—blaming nobody— and in
every thing testifying such an ingenuousness of disposition
and lowly opinion of herself, as must appear with particular
advantage at that moment to her friend.
Emma was in the humour to value simplicity
and modesty to the utmost; and all that was amiable,
all that ought to be attaching, seemed on Harriet’s
side, not her own. Harriet did not consider
herself as having any thing to complain of. The
affection of such a man as Mr. Elton would have been
too great a distinction.— She never could
have deserved him—and nobody but so partial
and kind a friend as Miss Woodhouse would have thought
it possible.
Her tears fell abundantly—but
her grief was so truly artless, that no dignity could
have made it more respectable in Emma’s eyes—
and she listened to her and tried to console her with
all her heart and understanding—really
for the time convinced that Harriet was the superior
creature of the two—and that to resemble
her would be more for her own welfare and happiness
than all that genius or intelligence could do.
It was rather too late in the day
to set about being simple-minded and ignorant; but
she left her with every previous resolution confirmed
of being humble and discreet, and repressing imagination
all the rest of her life. Her second duty now,
inferior only to her father’s claims, was to
promote Harriet’s comfort, and endeavour to
prove her own affection in some better method than
by match-making. She got her to Hartfield, and
shewed her the most unvarying kindness, striving to
occupy and amuse her, and by books and conversation,
to drive Mr. Elton from her thoughts.
Time, she knew, must be allowed for
this being thoroughly done; and she could suppose
herself but an indifferent judge of such matters in
general, and very inadequate to sympathise in an attachment
to Mr. Elton in particular; but it seemed to her reasonable
that at Harriet’s age, and with the entire extinction
of all hope, such a progress might be made towards
a state of composure by the time of Mr. Elton’s
return, as to allow them all to meet again in the
common routine of acquaintance, without any danger
of betraying sentiments or increasing them.
Harriet did think him all perfection,
and maintained the non-existence of any body equal
to him in person or goodness—and did, in
truth, prove herself more resolutely in love than
Emma had foreseen; but yet it appeared to her so natural,
so inevitable to strive against an inclination of
that sort unrequited, that she could not comprehend
its continuing very long in equal force.
If Mr. Elton, on his return, made
his own indifference as evident and indubitable as
she could not doubt he would anxiously do, she could
not imagine Harriet’s persisting to place her
happiness in the sight or the recollection of him.
Their being fixed, so absolutely fixed,
in the same place, was bad for each, for all three.
Not one of them had the power of removal, or of effecting
any material change of society. They must encounter
each other, and make the best of it.
Harriet was farther unfortunate in
the tone of her companions at Mrs. Goddard’s;
Mr. Elton being the adoration of all the teachers
and great girls in the school; and it must be at Hartfield
only that she could have any chance of hearing him
spoken of with cooling moderation or repellent truth.
Where the wound had been given, there must the cure
be found if anywhere; and Emma felt that, till she
saw her in the way of cure, there could be no true
peace for herself.