In this state of schemes, and hopes,
and connivance, June opened upon Hartfield.
To Highbury in general it brought no material change.
The Eltons were still talking of a visit from the Sucklings,
and of the use to be made of their barouche-landau;
and Jane Fairfax was still at her grandmother’s;
and as the return of the Campbells from Ireland was
again delayed, and August, instead of Midsummer, fixed
for it, she was likely to remain there full two months
longer, provided at least she were able to defeat
Mrs. Elton’s activity in her service, and save
herself from being hurried into a delightful situation
against her will.
Mr. Knightley, who, for some reason
best known to himself, had certainly taken an early
dislike to Frank Churchill, was only growing to dislike
him more. He began to suspect him of some double
dealing in his pursuit of Emma. That Emma was
his object appeared indisputable. Every thing
declared it; his own attentions, his father’s
hints, his mother-in-law’s guarded silence;
it was all in unison; words, conduct, discretion,
and indiscretion, told the same story. But while
so many were devoting him to Emma, and Emma herself
making him over to Harriet, Mr. Knightley began to
suspect him of some inclination to trifle with Jane
Fairfax. He could not understand it; but there
were symptoms of intelligence between them—he
thought so at least— symptoms of admiration
on his side, which, having once observed, he could
not persuade himself to think entirely void of meaning,
however he might wish to escape any of Emma’s
errors of imagination. She was not present
when the suspicion first arose. He was dining
with the Randalls family, and Jane, at the Eltons’;
and he had seen a look, more than a single look, at
Miss Fairfax, which, from the admirer of Miss Woodhouse,
seemed somewhat out of place. When he was again
in their company, he could not help remembering what
he had seen; nor could he avoid observations which,
unless it were like Cowper and his fire at twilight,
“Myself creating what I saw,”
brought him yet stronger suspicion
of there being a something of private liking, of private
understanding even, between Frank Churchill and Jane.
He had walked up one day after dinner,
as he very often did, to spend his evening at Hartfield.
Emma and Harriet were going to walk; he joined them;
and, on returning, they fell in with a larger party,
who, like themselves, judged it wisest to take their
exercise early, as the weather threatened rain; Mr.
and Mrs. Weston and their son, Miss Bates and her
niece, who had accidentally met. They all united;
and, on reaching Hartfield gates, Emma, who knew it
was exactly the sort of visiting that would be welcome
to her father, pressed them all to go in and drink
tea with him. The Randalls party agreed to it
immediately; and after a pretty long speech from Miss
Bates, which few persons listened to, she also found
it possible to accept dear Miss Woodhouse’s
most obliging invitation.
As they were turning into the grounds,
Mr. Perry passed by on horseback. The gentlemen
spoke of his horse.
“By the bye,” said Frank
Churchill to Mrs. Weston presently, “what became
of Mr. Perry’s plan of setting up his carriage?”
Mrs. Weston looked surprized, and
said, “I did not know that he ever had any such
plan.”
“Nay, I had it from you.
You wrote me word of it three months ago.”
“Me! impossible!”
“Indeed you did. I remember
it perfectly. You mentioned it as what was certainly
to be very soon. Mrs. Perry had told somebody,
and was extremely happy about it. It was owing
to her persuasion, as she thought his being
out in bad weather did him a great deal of harm.
You must remember it now?”
“Upon my word I never heard of it till this
moment.”
“Never! really, never!—Bless
me! how could it be?—Then I must have dreamt
it—but I was completely persuaded—Miss
Smith, you walk as if you were tired. You will
not be sorry to find yourself at home.”
“What is this?—What
is this?” cried Mr. Weston, “about Perry
and a carriage? Is Perry going to set up his
carriage, Frank? I am glad he can afford it.
You had it from himself, had you?”
“No, sir,” replied his
son, laughing, “I seem to have had it from nobody.—Very
odd!—I really was persuaded of Mrs. Weston’s
having mentioned it in one of her letters to Enscombe,
many weeks ago, with all these particulars—but
as she declares she never heard a syllable of it before,
of course it must have been a dream. I am a
great dreamer. I dream of every body at Highbury
when I am away— and when I have gone through
my particular friends, then I begin dreaming of Mr.
and Mrs. Perry.”
“It is odd though,” observed
his father, “that you should have had such a
regular connected dream about people whom it was not
very likely you should be thinking of at Enscombe.
Perry’s setting up his carriage! and his wife’s
persuading him to it, out of care for his health—
just what will happen, I have no doubt, some time or
other; only a little premature. What an air
of probability sometimes runs through a dream!
And at others, what a heap of absurdities it is!
Well, Frank, your dream certainly shews that Highbury
is in your thoughts when you are absent. Emma,
you are a great dreamer, I think?”
Emma was out of hearing. She
had hurried on before her guests to prepare her father
for their appearance, and was beyond the reach of
Mr. Weston’s hint.
“Why, to own the truth,”
cried Miss Bates, who had been trying in vain to be
heard the last two minutes, “if I must speak
on this subject, there is no denying that Mr. Frank
Churchill might have—I do not mean to say
that he did not dream it—I am sure I have
sometimes the oddest dreams in the world—but
if I am questioned about it, I must acknowledge that
there was such an idea last spring; for Mrs. Perry
herself mentioned it to my mother, and the Coles knew
of it as well as ourselves—but it was quite
a secret, known to nobody else, and only thought of
about three days. Mrs. Perry was very anxious
that he should have a carriage, and came to my mother
in great spirits one morning because she thought she
had prevailed. Jane, don’t you remember
grandmama’s telling us of it when we got home?
I forget where we had been walking to—
very likely to Randalls; yes, I think it was to Randalls.
Mrs. Perry was always particularly fond of my mother—indeed
I do not know who is not—and she had mentioned
it to her in confidence; she had no objection to her
telling us, of course, but it was not to go beyond:
and, from that day to this, I never mentioned it
to a soul that I know of. At the same time, I
will not positively answer for my having never dropt
a hint, because I know I do sometimes pop out a thing
before I am aware. I am a talker, you know;
I am rather a talker; and now and then I have let a
thing escape me which I should not. I am not
like Jane; I wish I were. I will answer for it
she never betrayed the least thing in the world.
Where is she?—Oh! just behind. Perfectly
remember Mrs. Perry’s coming.— Extraordinary
dream, indeed!”
They were entering the hall.
Mr. Knightley’s eyes had preceded Miss Bates’s
in a glance at Jane. From Frank Churchill’s
face, where he thought he saw confusion suppressed
or laughed away, he had involuntarily turned to hers;
but she was indeed behind, and too busy with her shawl.
Mr. Weston had walked in. The two other gentlemen
waited at the door to let her pass. Mr. Knightley
suspected in Frank Churchill the determination of catching
her eye— he seemed watching her intently—in
vain, however, if it were so— Jane passed
between them into the hall, and looked at neither.
There was no time for farther remark
or explanation. The dream must be borne with,
and Mr. Knightley must take his seat with the rest
round the large modern circular table which Emma had
introduced at Hartfield, and which none but Emma could
have had power to place there and persuade her father
to use, instead of the small-sized Pembroke, on which
two of his daily meals had, for forty years been crowded.
Tea passed pleasantly, and nobody seemed in a hurry
to move.
“Miss Woodhouse,” said
Frank Churchill, after examining a table behind him,
which he could reach as he sat, “have your nephews
taken away their alphabets—their box of
letters? It used to stand here. Where is
it? This is a sort of dull-looking evening, that
ought to be treated rather as winter than summer.
We had great amusement with those letters one morning.
I want to puzzle you again.”
Emma was pleased with the thought;
and producing the box, the table was quickly scattered
over with alphabets, which no one seemed so much disposed
to employ as their two selves. They were rapidly
forming words for each other, or for any body else
who would be puzzled. The quietness of the game
made it particularly eligible for Mr. Woodhouse, who
had often been distressed by the more animated sort,
which Mr. Weston had occasionally introduced, and who
now sat happily occupied in lamenting, with tender
melancholy, over the departure of the “poor
little boys,” or in fondly pointing out, as he
took up any stray letter near him, how beautifully
Emma had written it.
Frank Churchill placed a word before
Miss Fairfax. She gave a slight glance round
the table, and applied herself to it. Frank was
next to Emma, Jane opposite to them—and
Mr. Knightley so placed as to see them all; and it
was his object to see as much as he could, with as
little apparent observation. The word was discovered,
and with a faint smile pushed away. If meant
to be immediately mixed with the others, and buried
from sight, she should have looked on the table instead
of looking just across, for it was not mixed; and
Harriet, eager after every fresh word, and finding
out none, directly took it up, and fell to work.
She was sitting by Mr. Knightley, and turned to him
for help. The word was blunder; and as
Harriet exultingly proclaimed it, there was a blush
on Jane’s cheek which gave it a meaning not
otherwise ostensible. Mr. Knightley connected
it with the dream; but how it could all be, was beyond
his comprehension. How the delicacy, the discretion
of his favourite could have been so lain asleep!
He feared there must be some decided involvement.
Disingenuousness and double dealing seemed to meet
him at every turn. These letters were but the
vehicle for gallantry and trick. It was a child’s
play, chosen to conceal a deeper game on Frank Churchill’s
part.
With great indignation did he continue
to observe him; with great alarm and distrust, to
observe also his two blinded companions. He saw
a short word prepared for Emma, and given to her with
a look sly and demure. He saw that Emma had
soon made it out, and found it highly entertaining,
though it was something which she judged it proper
to appear to censure; for she said, “Nonsense!
for shame!” He heard Frank Churchill next say,
with a glance towards Jane, “I will give it
to her—shall I?”—and as
clearly heard Emma opposing it with eager laughing
warmth. “No, no, you must not; you shall
not, indeed.”
It was done however. This gallant
young man, who seemed to love without feeling, and
to recommend himself without complaisance, directly
handed over the word to Miss Fairfax, and with a particular
degree of sedate civility entreated her to study it.
Mr. Knightley’s excessive curiosity to know
what this word might be, made him seize every possible
moment for darting his eye towards it, and it was
not long before he saw it to be Dixon.
Jane Fairfax’s perception seemed to accompany
his; her comprehension was certainly more equal to
the covert meaning, the superior intelligence, of those
five letters so arranged. She was evidently
displeased; looked up, and seeing herself watched,
blushed more deeply than he had ever perceived her,
and saying only, “I did not know that proper
names were allowed,” pushed away the letters
with even an angry spirit, and looked resolved to
be engaged by no other word that could be offered.
Her face was averted from those who had made the attack,
and turned towards her aunt.
“Aye, very true, my dear,”
cried the latter, though Jane had not spoken a word—“I
was just going to say the same thing. It is time
for us to be going indeed. The evening is closing
in, and grandmama will be looking for us. My
dear sir, you are too obliging. We really must
wish you good night.”
Jane’s alertness in moving,
proved her as ready as her aunt had preconceived.
She was immediately up, and wanting to quit the table;
but so many were also moving, that she could not get
away; and Mr. Knightley thought he saw another collection
of letters anxiously pushed towards her, and resolutely
swept away by her unexamined. She was afterwards
looking for her shawl—Frank Churchill was
looking also—it was growing dusk, and the
room was in confusion; and how they parted, Mr. Knightley
could not tell.
He remained at Hartfield after all
the rest, his thoughts full of what he had seen; so
full, that when the candles came to assist his observations,
he must—yes, he certainly must, as a friend—
an anxious friend—give Emma some hint, ask
her some question. He could not see her in a
situation of such danger, without trying to preserve
her. It was his duty.
“Pray, Emma,” said he,
“may I ask in what lay the great amusement,
the poignant sting of the last word given to you and
Miss Fairfax? I saw the word, and am curious
to know how it could be so very entertaining to the
one, and so very distressing to the other.”
Emma was extremely confused.
She could not endure to give him the true explanation;
for though her suspicions were by no means removed,
she was really ashamed of having ever imparted them.
“Oh!” she cried in evident
embarrassment, “it all meant nothing; a mere
joke among ourselves.”
“The joke,” he replied
gravely, “seemed confined to you and Mr. Churchill.”
He had hoped she would speak again,
but she did not. She would rather busy herself
about any thing than speak. He sat a little
while in doubt. A variety of evils crossed his
mind. Interference— fruitless interference.
Emma’s confusion, and the acknowledged intimacy,
seemed to declare her affection engaged. Yet
he would speak. He owed it to her, to risk any
thing that might be involved in an unwelcome interference,
rather than her welfare; to encounter any thing, rather
than the remembrance of neglect in such a cause.
“My dear Emma,” said he
at last, with earnest kindness, “do you think
you perfectly understand the degree of acquaintance
between the gentleman and lady we have been speaking
of?”
“Between Mr. Frank Churchill
and Miss Fairfax? Oh! yes, perfectly.—
Why do you make a doubt of it?”
“Have you never at any time
had reason to think that he admired her, or that she
admired him?”
“Never, never!” she cried
with a most open eagerness—“Never,
for the twentieth part of a moment, did such an idea
occur to me. And how could it possibly come into
your head?”
“I have lately imagined that
I saw symptoms of attachment between them—
certain expressive looks, which I did not believe meant
to be public.”
“Oh! you amuse me excessively.
I am delighted to find that you can vouchsafe to
let your imagination wander—but it will
not do— very sorry to check you in your
first essay—but indeed it will not do.
There is no admiration between them, I do assure you;
and the appearances which have caught you, have arisen
from some peculiar circumstances—feelings
rather of a totally different nature— it
is impossible exactly to explain:—there
is a good deal of nonsense in it—but the
part which is capable of being communicated, which
is sense, is, that they are as far from any attachment
or admiration for one another, as any two beings in
the world can be. That is, I presume it
to be so on her side, and I can answer for its
being so on his. I will answer for the gentleman’s
indifference.”
She spoke with a confidence which
staggered, with a satisfaction which silenced, Mr.
Knightley. She was in gay spirits, and would
have prolonged the conversation, wanting to hear the
particulars of his suspicions, every look described,
and all the wheres and hows of a circumstance which
highly entertained her: but his gaiety did not
meet hers. He found he could not be useful, and
his feelings were too much irritated for talking.
That he might not be irritated into an absolute fever,
by the fire which Mr. Woodhouse’s tender habits
required almost every evening throughout the year,
he soon afterwards took a hasty leave, and walked
home to the coolness and solitude of Donwell Abbey.