Small heart had Harriet for visiting.
Only half an hour before her friend called for her
at Mrs. Goddard’s, her evil stars had led her
to the very spot where, at that moment, a trunk, directed
to The Rev. Philip Elton, White-Hart, Bath,
was to be seen under the operation of being lifted
into the butcher’s cart, which was to convey
it to where the coaches past; and every thing in this
world, excepting that trunk and the direction, was
consequently a blank.
She went, however; and when they reached
the farm, and she was to be put down, at the end of
the broad, neat gravel walk, which led between espalier
apple-trees to the front door, the sight of every
thing which had given her so much pleasure the autumn
before, was beginning to revive a little local agitation;
and when they parted, Emma observed her to be looking
around with a sort of fearful curiosity, which determined
her not to allow the visit to exceed the proposed
quarter of an hour. She went on herself, to give
that portion of time to an old servant who was married,
and settled in Donwell.
The quarter of an hour brought her
punctually to the white gate again; and Miss Smith
receiving her summons, was with her without delay,
and unattended by any alarming young man. She
came solitarily down the gravel walk—a
Miss Martin just appearing at the door, and parting
with her seemingly with ceremonious civility.
Harriet could not very soon give an
intelligible account. She was feeling too much;
but at last Emma collected from her enough to understand
the sort of meeting, and the sort of pain it was creating.
She had seen only Mrs. Martin and the two girls.
They had received her doubtingly, if not coolly; and
nothing beyond the merest commonplace had been talked
almost all the time— till just at last,
when Mrs. Martin’s saying, all of a sudden,
that she thought Miss Smith was grown, had brought
on a more interesting subject, and a warmer manner.
In that very room she had been measured last September,
with her two friends. There were the pencilled
marks and memorandums on the wainscot by the window.
He had done it. They all seemed to remember
the day, the hour, the party, the occasion—to
feel the same consciousness, the same regrets—to
be ready to return to the same good understanding;
and they were just growing again like themselves, (Harriet,
as Emma must suspect, as ready as the best of them
to be cordial and happy,) when the carriage reappeared,
and all was over. The style of the visit, and
the shortness of it, were then felt to be decisive.
Fourteen minutes to be given to those with whom she
had thankfully passed six weeks not six months ago!—Emma
could not but picture it all, and feel how justly
they might resent, how naturally Harriet must suffer.
It was a bad business. She would have given
a great deal, or endured a great deal, to have had
the Martins in a higher rank of life. They were
so deserving, that a little higher should have
been enough: but as it was, how could she have
done otherwise?—Impossible!—She
could not repent. They must be separated; but
there was a great deal of pain in the process—
so much to herself at this time, that she soon felt
the necessity of a little consolation, and resolved
on going home by way of Randalls to procure it.
Her mind was quite sick of Mr. Elton and the Martins.
The refreshment of Randalls was absolutely necessary.
It was a good scheme; but on driving
to the door they heard that neither “master
nor mistress was at home;” they had both been
out some time; the man believed they were gone to Hartfield.
“This is too bad,” cried
Emma, as they turned away. “And now we
shall just miss them; too provoking!—I do
not know when I have been so disappointed.”
And she leaned back in the corner, to indulge her
murmurs, or to reason them away; probably a little
of both— such being the commonest process
of a not ill-disposed mind. Presently the carriage
stopt; she looked up; it was stopt by Mr. and Mrs.
Weston, who were standing to speak to her. There
was instant pleasure in the sight of them, and still
greater pleasure was conveyed in sound—for
Mr. Weston immediately accosted her with,
“How d’ye do?—how
d’ye do?—We have been sitting with
your father— glad to see him so well.
Frank comes to-morrow—I had a letter this
morning—we see him to-morrow by dinner-time
to a certainty— he is at Oxford to-day,
and he comes for a whole fortnight; I knew it would
be so. If he had come at Christmas he could not
have staid three days; I was always glad he did not
come at Christmas; now we are going to have just the
right weather for him, fine, dry, settled weather.
We shall enjoy him completely; every thing has turned
out exactly as we could wish.”
There was no resisting such news,
no possibility of avoiding the influence of such a
happy face as Mr. Weston’s, confirmed as it all
was by the words and the countenance of his wife, fewer
and quieter, but not less to the purpose. To
know that she thought his coming certain was
enough to make Emma consider it so, and sincerely did
she rejoice in their joy. It was a most delightful
reanimation of exhausted spirits. The worn-out
past was sunk in the freshness of what was coming;
and in the rapidity of half a moment’s thought,
she hoped Mr. Elton would now be talked of no more.
Mr. Weston gave her the history of
the engagements at Enscombe, which allowed his son
to answer for having an entire fortnight at his command,
as well as the route and the method of his journey;
and she listened, and smiled, and congratulated.
“I shall soon bring him over
to Hartfield,” said he, at the conclusion.
Emma could imagine she saw a touch
of the arm at this speech, from his wife.
“We had better move on, Mr.
Weston,” said she, “we are detaining the
girls.”
“Well, well, I am ready;”—and
turning again to Emma, “but you must not be
expecting such a very fine young man; you have
only had my account you know; I dare say he
is really nothing extraordinary:”—
though his own sparkling eyes at the moment were speaking
a very different conviction.
Emma could look perfectly unconscious
and innocent, and answer in a manner that appropriated
nothing.
“Think of me to-morrow, my dear
Emma, about four o’clock,” was Mrs. Weston’s
parting injunction; spoken with some anxiety, and
meant only for her.
“Four o’clock!—depend
upon it he will be here by three,” was Mr. Weston’s
quick amendment; and so ended a most satisfactory meeting.
Emma’s spirits were mounted quite up to happiness;
every thing wore a different air; James and his horses
seemed not half so sluggish as before. When
she looked at the hedges, she thought the elder at
least must soon be coming out; and when she turned
round to Harriet, she saw something like a look of
spring, a tender smile even there.
“Will Mr. Frank Churchill pass
through Bath as well as Oxford?”—
was a question, however, which did not augur much.
But neither geography nor tranquillity
could come all at once, and Emma was now in a humour
to resolve that they should both come in time.
The morning of the interesting day
arrived, and Mrs. Weston’s faithful pupil did
not forget either at ten, or eleven, or twelve o’clock,
that she was to think of her at four.
“My dear, dear anxious friend,”—said
she, in mental soliloquy, while walking downstairs
from her own room, “always overcareful for every
body’s comfort but your own; I see you now in
all your little fidgets, going again and again into
his room, to be sure that all is right.”
The clock struck twelve as she passed through the
hall. “’Tis twelve; I shall not forget
to think of you four hours hence; and by this time
to-morrow, perhaps, or a little later, I may be thinking
of the possibility of their all calling here.
I am sure they will bring him soon.”
She opened the parlour door, and saw
two gentlemen sitting with her father—Mr.
Weston and his son. They had been arrived only
a few minutes, and Mr. Weston had scarcely finished
his explanation of Frank’s being a day before
his time, and her father was yet in the midst of his
very civil welcome and congratulations, when she appeared,
to have her share of surprize, introduction, and pleasure.
The Frank Churchill so long talked
of, so high in interest, was actually before her—he
was presented to her, and she did not think too much
had been said in his praise; he was a very good
looking young man; height, air, address, all were unexceptionable,
and his countenance had a great deal of the spirit
and liveliness of his father’s; he looked quick
and sensible. She felt immediately that she
should like him; and there was a well-bred ease of
manner, and a readiness to talk, which convinced her
that he came intending to be acquainted with her,
and that acquainted they soon must be.
He had reached Randalls the evening
before. She was pleased with the eagerness to
arrive which had made him alter his plan, and travel
earlier, later, and quicker, that he might gain half
a day.
“I told you yesterday,”
cried Mr. Weston with exultation, “I told you
all that he would be here before the time named.
I remembered what I used to do myself. One
cannot creep upon a journey; one cannot help getting
on faster than one has planned; and the pleasure of
coming in upon one’s friends before the look-out
begins, is worth a great deal more than any little
exertion it needs.”
“It is a great pleasure where
one can indulge in it,” said the young man,
“though there are not many houses that I should
presume on so far; but in coming home I felt
I might do any thing.”
The word home made his father
look on him with fresh complacency. Emma was
directly sure that he knew how to make himself agreeable;
the conviction was strengthened by what followed.
He was very much pleased with Randalls, thought it
a most admirably arranged house, would hardly allow
it even to be very small, admired the situation, the
walk to Highbury, Highbury itself, Hartfield still
more, and professed himself to have always felt the
sort of interest in the country which none but one’s
own country gives, and the greatest curiosity
to visit it. That he should never have been
able to indulge so amiable a feeling before, passed
suspiciously through Emma’s brain; but still,
if it were a falsehood, it was a pleasant one, and
pleasantly handled. His manner had no air of
study or exaggeration. He did really look and
speak as if in a state of no common enjoyment.
Their subjects in general were such
as belong to an opening acquaintance. On his
side were the inquiries,—“Was she
a horsewoman?—Pleasant rides?—
Pleasant walks?—Had they a large neighbourhood?—Highbury,
perhaps, afforded society enough?—There
were several very pretty houses in and about it.—Balls—had
they balls?—Was it a musical society?”
But when satisfied on all these points,
and their acquaintance proportionably advanced, he
contrived to find an opportunity, while their two
fathers were engaged with each other, of introducing
his mother-in-law, and speaking of her with so much
handsome praise, so much warm admiration, so much
gratitude for the happiness she secured to his father,
and her very kind reception of himself, as was an
additional proof of his knowing how to please—
and of his certainly thinking it worth while to try
to please her. He did not advance a word of praise
beyond what she knew to be thoroughly deserved by
Mrs. Weston; but, undoubtedly he could know very little
of the matter. He understood what would be welcome;
he could be sure of little else. “His father’s
marriage,” he said, “had been the wisest
measure, every friend must rejoice in it; and the
family from whom he had received such a blessing must
be ever considered as having conferred the highest
obligation on him.”
He got as near as he could to thanking
her for Miss Taylor’s merits, without seeming
quite to forget that in the common course of things
it was to be rather supposed that Miss Taylor had
formed Miss Woodhouse’s character, than Miss
Woodhouse Miss Taylor’s. And at last, as
if resolved to qualify his opinion completely for
travelling round to its object, he wound it all up
with astonishment at the youth and beauty of her person.
“Elegant, agreeable manners,
I was prepared for,” said he; “but I confess
that, considering every thing, I had not expected
more than a very tolerably well-looking woman of a
certain age; I did not know that I was to find a pretty
young woman in Mrs. Weston.”
“You cannot see too much perfection
in Mrs. Weston for my feelings,” said Emma;
“were you to guess her to be eighteen,
I should listen with pleasure; but she would
be ready to quarrel with you for using such words.
Don’t let her imagine that you have spoken of
her as a pretty young woman.”
“I hope I should know better,”
he replied; “no, depend upon it, (with a gallant
bow,) that in addressing Mrs. Weston I should understand
whom I might praise without any danger of being thought
extravagant in my terms.”
Emma wondered whether the same suspicion
of what might be expected from their knowing each
other, which had taken strong possession of her mind,
had ever crossed his; and whether his compliments were
to be considered as marks of acquiescence, or proofs
of defiance. She must see more of him to understand
his ways; at present she only felt they were agreeable.
She had no doubt of what Mr. Weston
was often thinking about. His quick eye she detected
again and again glancing towards them with a happy
expression; and even, when he might have determined
not to look, she was confident that he was often listening.
Her own father’s perfect exemption
from any thought of the kind, the entire deficiency
in him of all such sort of penetration or suspicion,
was a most comfortable circumstance. Happily
he was not farther from approving matrimony than from
foreseeing it.— Though always objecting
to every marriage that was arranged, he never suffered
beforehand from the apprehension of any; it seemed
as if he could not think so ill of any two persons’
understanding as to suppose they meant to marry till
it were proved against them. She blessed the
favouring blindness. He could now, without the
drawback of a single unpleasant surmise, without a
glance forward at any possible treachery in his guest,
give way to all his natural kind-hearted civility in
solicitous inquiries after Mr. Frank Churchill’s
accommodation on his journey, through the sad evils
of sleeping two nights on the road, and express very
genuine unmixed anxiety to know that he had certainly
escaped catching cold—which, however, he
could not allow him to feel quite assured of himself
till after another night.
A reasonable visit paid, Mr. Weston
began to move.—“He must be going.
He had business at the Crown about his hay, and a great
many errands for Mrs. Weston at Ford’s, but
he need not hurry any body else.” His son,
too well bred to hear the hint, rose immediately also,
saying,
“As you are going farther on
business, sir, I will take the opportunity of paying
a visit, which must be paid some day or other, and
therefore may as well be paid now. I have the
honour of being acquainted with a neighbour of yours,
(turning to Emma,) a lady residing in or near Highbury;
a family of the name of Fairfax. I shall have
no difficulty, I suppose, in finding the house; though
Fairfax, I believe, is not the proper name—I
should rather say Barnes, or Bates. Do you know
any family of that name?”
“To be sure we do,” cried
his father; “Mrs. Bates—we passed
her house— I saw Miss Bates at the window.
True, true, you are acquainted with Miss Fairfax;
I remember you knew her at Weymouth, and a fine girl
she is. Call upon her, by all means.”
“There is no necessity for my
calling this morning,” said the young man; “another
day would do as well; but there was that degree of
acquaintance at Weymouth which—”
“Oh! go to-day, go to-day.
Do not defer it. What is right to be done cannot
be done too soon. And, besides, I must give you
a hint, Frank; any want of attention to her here
should be carefully avoided. You saw her with
the Campbells, when she was the equal of every body
she mixed with, but here she is with a poor old grandmother,
who has barely enough to live on. If you do not
call early it will be a slight.”
The son looked convinced.
“I have heard her speak of the
acquaintance,” said Emma; “she is a very
elegant young woman.”
He agreed to it, but with so quiet
a “Yes,” as inclined her almost to doubt
his real concurrence; and yet there must be a very
distinct sort of elegance for the fashionable world,
if Jane Fairfax could be thought only ordinarily gifted
with it.
“If you were never particularly
struck by her manners before,” said she, “I
think you will to-day. You will see her to advantage;
see her and hear her—no, I am afraid you
will not hear her at all, for she has an aunt who
never holds her tongue.”
“You are acquainted with Miss
Jane Fairfax, sir, are you?” said Mr. Woodhouse,
always the last to make his way in conversation; “then
give me leave to assure you that you will find her
a very agreeable young lady. She is staying
here on a visit to her grandmama and aunt, very worthy
people; I have known them all my life. They will
be extremely glad to see you, I am sure; and one of
my servants shall go with you to shew you the way.”
“My dear sir, upon no account
in the world; my father can direct me.”
“But your father is not going
so far; he is only going to the Crown, quite on the
other side of the street, and there are a great many
houses; you might be very much at a loss, and it is
a very dirty walk, unless you keep on the footpath;
but my coachman can tell you where you had best cross
the street.”
Mr. Frank Churchill still declined
it, looking as serious as he could, and his father
gave his hearty support by calling out, “My good
friend, this is quite unnecessary; Frank knows a puddle
of water when he sees it, and as to Mrs. Bates’s,
he may get there from the Crown in a hop, step, and
jump.”
They were permitted to go alone; and
with a cordial nod from one, and a graceful bow from
the other, the two gentlemen took leave. Emma
remained very well pleased with this beginning of the
acquaintance, and could now engage to think of them
all at Randalls any hour of the day, with full confidence
in their comfort.