The wretchedness of a scheme to Box
Hill was in Emma’s thoughts all the evening.
How it might be considered by the rest of the party,
she could not tell. They, in their different
homes, and their different ways, might be looking
back on it with pleasure; but in her view it was a
morning more completely misspent, more totally bare
of rational satisfaction at the time, and more to
be abhorred in recollection, than any she had ever
passed. A whole evening of back-gammon with
her father, was felicity to it. There, indeed,
lay real pleasure, for there she was giving up the
sweetest hours of the twenty-four to his comfort;
and feeling that, unmerited as might be the degree
of his fond affection and confiding esteem, she could
not, in her general conduct, be open to any severe
reproach. As a daughter, she hoped she was not
without a heart. She hoped no one could have
said to her, “How could you be so unfeeling to
your father?— I must, I will tell you truths
while I can.” Miss Bates should never
again—no, never! If attention, in
future, could do away the past, she might hope to
be forgiven. She had been often remiss, her
conscience told her so; remiss, perhaps, more in thought
than fact; scornful, ungracious. But it should
be so no more. In the warmth of true contrition,
she would call upon her the very next morning, and
it should be the beginning, on her side, of a regular,
equal, kindly intercourse.
She was just as determined when the
morrow came, and went early, that nothing might prevent
her. It was not unlikely, she thought, that
she might see Mr. Knightley in her way; or, perhaps,
he might come in while she were paying her visit.
She had no objection. She would not be ashamed
of the appearance of the penitence, so justly and
truly hers. Her eyes were towards Donwell as
she walked, but she saw him not.
“The ladies were all at home.”
She had never rejoiced at the sound before, nor ever
before entered the passage, nor walked up the stairs,
with any wish of giving pleasure, but in conferring
obligation, or of deriving it, except in subsequent
ridicule.
There was a bustle on her approach;
a good deal of moving and talking. She heard
Miss Bates’s voice, something was to be done
in a hurry; the maid looked frightened and awkward;
hoped she would be pleased to wait a moment, and then
ushered her in too soon. The aunt and niece
seemed both escaping into the adjoining room.
Jane she had a distinct glimpse of, looking extremely
ill; and, before the door had shut them out, she heard
Miss Bates saying, “Well, my dear, I shall say
you are laid down upon the bed, and I am sure you are
ill enough.”
Poor old Mrs. Bates, civil and humble
as usual, looked as if she did not quite understand
what was going on.
“I am afraid Jane is not very
well,” said she, “but I do not know; they
tell me she is well. I dare say my daughter
will be here presently, Miss Woodhouse. I hope
you find a chair. I wish Hetty had not gone.
I am very little able—Have you a chair,
ma’am? Do you sit where you like?
I am sure she will be here presently.”
Emma seriously hoped she would.
She had a moment’s fear of Miss Bates keeping
away from her. But Miss Bates soon came—“Very
happy and obliged”—but Emma’s
conscience told her that there was not the same cheerful
volubility as before—less ease of look and
manner. A very friendly inquiry after Miss Fairfax,
she hoped, might lead the way to a return of old feelings.
The touch seemed immediate.
“Ah! Miss Woodhouse, how
kind you are!—I suppose you have heard—
and are come to give us joy. This does not seem
much like joy, indeed, in me—(twinkling
away a tear or two)—but it will be very
trying for us to part with her, after having had her
so long, and she has a dreadful headache just now,
writing all the morning:— such long letters,
you know, to be written to Colonel Campbell, and Mrs.
Dixon. `My dear,’ said I, `you will blind yourself’—
for tears were in her eyes perpetually. One cannot
wonder, one cannot wonder. It is a great change;
and though she is amazingly fortunate—such
a situation, I suppose, as no young woman before ever
met with on first going out—do not think
us ungrateful, Miss Woodhouse, for such surprising
good fortune—(again dispersing her tears)—but,
poor dear soul! if you were to see what a headache
she has. When one is in great pain, you know
one cannot feel any blessing quite as it may deserve.
She is as low as possible. To look at her, nobody
would think how delighted and happy she is to have
secured such a situation. You will excuse her
not coming to you—she is not able—she
is gone into her own room— I want her to
lie down upon the bed. `My dear,’ said I, `I
shall say you are laid down upon the bed:’
but, however, she is not; she is walking about the
room. But, now that she has written her letters,
she says she shall soon be well. She will be
extremely sorry to miss seeing you, Miss Woodhouse,
but your kindness will excuse her. You were
kept waiting at the door—I was quite ashamed—
but somehow there was a little bustle—for
it so happened that we had not heard the knock, and
till you were on the stairs, we did not know any body
was coming. `It is only Mrs. Cole,’ said I,
`depend upon it. Nobody else would come so early.’
`Well,’ said she, `it must be borne some time
or other, and it may as well be now.’ But
then Patty came in, and said it was you. `Oh!’
said I, `it is Miss Woodhouse: I am sure you
will like to see her.’— `I can see
nobody,’ said she; and up she got, and would
go away; and that was what made us keep you waiting—and
extremely sorry and ashamed we were. `If you must
go, my dear,’ said I, `you must, and I will
say you are laid down upon the bed.’”
Emma was most sincerely interested.
Her heart had been long growing kinder towards Jane;
and this picture of her present sufferings acted as
a cure of every former ungenerous suspicion, and left
her nothing but pity; and the remembrance of the less
just and less gentle sensations of the past, obliged
her to admit that Jane might very naturally resolve
on seeing Mrs. Cole or any other steady friend, when
she might not bear to see herself. She spoke
as she felt, with earnest regret and solicitude—sincerely
wishing that the circumstances which she collected
from Miss Bates to be now actually determined on,
might be as much for Miss Fairfax’s advantage
and comfort as possible. “It must be a
severe trial to them all. She had understood
it was to be delayed till Colonel Campbell’s
return.”
“So very kind!” replied
Miss Bates. “But you are always kind.”
There was no bearing such an “always;”
and to break through her dreadful gratitude, Emma
made the direct inquiry of—
“Where—may I ask?—is Miss
Fairfax going?”
“To a Mrs. Smallridge—charming
woman—most superior—to have
the charge of her three little girls—delightful
children. Impossible that any situation could
be more replete with comfort; if we except, perhaps,
Mrs. Suckling’s own family, and Mrs. Bragge’s;
but Mrs. Smallridge is intimate with both, and in the
very same neighbourhood:—lives only four
miles from Maple Grove. Jane will be only four
miles from Maple Grove.”
“Mrs. Elton, I suppose, has
been the person to whom Miss Fairfax owes—”
“Yes, our good Mrs. Elton.
The most indefatigable, true friend. She would
not take a denial. She would not let Jane say,
`No;’ for when Jane first heard of it, (it was
the day before yesterday, the very morning we were
at Donwell,) when Jane first heard of it, she was
quite decided against accepting the offer, and for
the reasons you mention; exactly as you say, she had
made up her mind to close with nothing till Colonel
Campbell’s return, and nothing should induce
her to enter into any engagement at present—and
so she told Mrs. Elton over and over again—and
I am sure I had no more idea that she would change
her mind!—but that good Mrs. Elton, whose
judgment never fails her, saw farther than I did.
It is not every body that would have stood out in
such a kind way as she did, and refuse to take Jane’s
answer; but she positively declared she would not
write any such denial yesterday, as Jane wished her;
she would wait—and, sure enough, yesterday
evening it was all settled that Jane should go.
Quite a surprize to me! I had not the least
idea!—Jane took Mrs. Elton aside, and told
her at once, that upon thinking over the advantages
of Mrs. Smallridge’s situation, she had come
to the resolution of accepting it.—I did
not know a word of it till it was all settled.”
“You spent the evening with Mrs. Elton?”
“Yes, all of us; Mrs. Elton
would have us come. It was settled so, upon
the hill, while we were walking about with Mr. Knightley.
`You must all spend your evening with
us,’ said she—`I positively must
have you all come.’”
“Mr. Knightley was there too, was he?”
“No, not Mr. Knightley; he declined
it from the first; and though I thought he would come,
because Mrs. Elton declared she would not let him
off, he did not;—but my mother, and Jane,
and I, were all there, and a very agreeable evening
we had. Such kind friends, you know, Miss Woodhouse,
one must always find agreeable, though every body
seemed rather fagged after the morning’s party.
Even pleasure, you know, is fatiguing—and
I cannot say that any of them seemed very much to
have enjoyed it. However, I shall always
think it a very pleasant party, and feel extremely
obliged to the kind friends who included me in it.”
“Miss Fairfax, I suppose, though
you were not aware of it, had been making up her mind
the whole day?”
“I dare say she had.”
“Whenever the time may come,
it must be unwelcome to her and all her friends—but
I hope her engagement will have every alleviation
that is possible—I mean, as to the character
and manners of the family.”
“Thank you, dear Miss Woodhouse.
Yes, indeed, there is every thing in the world that
can make her happy in it. Except the Sucklings
and Bragges, there is not such another nursery establishment,
so liberal and elegant, in all Mrs. Elton’s acquaintance.
Mrs. Smallridge, a most delightful woman!—A
style of living almost equal to Maple Grove—and
as to the children, except the little Sucklings and
little Bragges, there are not such elegant sweet children
anywhere. Jane will be treated with such regard
and kindness!— It will be nothing but pleasure,
a life of pleasure.—And her salary!—
I really cannot venture to name her salary to you,
Miss Woodhouse. Even you, used as you are to
great sums, would hardly believe that so much could
be given to a young person like Jane.”
“Ah! madam,” cried Emma,
“if other children are at all like what I remember
to have been myself, I should think five times the
amount of what I have ever yet heard named as a salary
on such occasions, dearly earned.”
“You are so noble in your ideas!”
“And when is Miss Fairfax to leave you?”
“Very soon, very soon, indeed;
that’s the worst of it. Within a fortnight.
Mrs. Smallridge is in a great hurry. My poor
mother does not know how to bear it. So then,
I try to put it out of her thoughts, and say, Come
ma’am, do not let us think about it any more.”
“Her friends must all be sorry
to lose her; and will not Colonel and Mrs. Campbell
be sorry to find that she has engaged herself before
their return?”
“Yes; Jane says she is sure
they will; but yet, this is such a situation as she
cannot feel herself justified in declining. I
was so astonished when she first told me what she had
been saying to Mrs. Elton, and when Mrs. Elton at
the same moment came congratulating me upon it!
It was before tea—stay—no, it
could not be before tea, because we were just going
to cards—and yet it was before tea, because
I remember thinking—Oh! no, now I recollect,
now I have it; something happened before tea, but
not that. Mr. Elton was called out of the room
before tea, old John Abdy’s son wanted to speak
with him. Poor old John, I have a great regard
for him; he was clerk to my poor father twenty-seven
years; and now, poor old man, he is bed-ridden, and
very poorly with the rheumatic gout in his joints—
I must go and see him to-day; and so will Jane, I am
sure, if she gets out at all. And poor John’s
son came to talk to Mr. Elton about relief from the
parish; he is very well to do himself, you know, being
head man at the Crown, ostler, and every thing of
that sort, but still he cannot keep his father without
some help; and so, when Mr. Elton came back, he told
us what John ostler had been telling him, and then
it came out about the chaise having been sent to Randalls
to take Mr. Frank Churchill to Richmond. That
was what happened before tea. It was after tea
that Jane spoke to Mrs. Elton.”
Miss Bates would hardly give Emma
time to say how perfectly new this circumstance was
to her; but as without supposing it possible that
she could be ignorant of any of the particulars of
Mr. Frank Churchill’s going, she proceeded to
give them all, it was of no consequence.
What Mr. Elton had learned from the
ostler on the subject, being the accumulation of the
ostler’s own knowledge, and the knowledge of
the servants at Randalls, was, that a messenger had
come over from Richmond soon after the return of the
party from Box Hill— which messenger, however,
had been no more than was expected; and that Mr. Churchill
had sent his nephew a few lines, containing, upon
the whole, a tolerable account of Mrs. Churchill, and
only wishing him not to delay coming back beyond the
next morning early; but that Mr. Frank Churchill having
resolved to go home directly, without waiting at all,
and his horse seeming to have got a cold, Tom had
been sent off immediately for the Crown chaise, and
the ostler had stood out and seen it pass by, the
boy going a good pace, and driving very steady.
There was nothing in all this either
to astonish or interest, and it caught Emma’s
attention only as it united with the subject which
already engaged her mind. The contrast between
Mrs. Churchill’s importance in the world, and
Jane Fairfax’s, struck her; one was every thing,
the other nothing—and she sat musing on
the difference of woman’s destiny, and quite
unconscious on what her eyes were fixed, till roused
by Miss Bates’s saying,
“Aye, I see what you are thinking
of, the pianoforte. What is to become of that?—Very
true. Poor dear Jane was talking of it just now.—
`You must go,’ said she. `You and I must part.
You will have no business here.—Let it
stay, however,’ said she; `give it houseroom
till Colonel Campbell comes back. I shall talk
about it to him; he will settle for me; he will help
me out of all my difficulties.’—
And to this day, I do believe, she knows not whether
it was his present or his daughter’s.”
Now Emma was obliged to think of the
pianoforte; and the remembrance of all her former
fanciful and unfair conjectures was so little pleasing,
that she soon allowed herself to believe her visit
had been long enough; and, with a repetition of every
thing that she could venture to say of the good wishes
which she really felt, took leave.