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Chapter 40
A very few days had passed after this
adventure, when Harriet came one morning to Emma with a small
parcel
in her hand, and after sitting down and hesitating, thus began:
"Miss Woodhouse--if you
are at
leisure--I have something that I should like to tell you--a
sort
of
confession to make--and then, you know, it will be over."
Emma was a good deal
surprised; but
begged her to speak. There was a seriousness in Harriet's
manner which prepared her, quite as much as her words, for
something more than ordinary.
"It is my duty, and I am
sure it is
my wish," she continued, "to have no reserves with you on
this subject. As I
am happily quite
an altered creature in one
respect, it is very fit that you should have the satisfaction of
knowing
it. I do not want
to say more than is
necessary--I am too much
ashamed of having given way as I have done, and I dare say you
understand me."
"Yes," said Emma, "I
hope
I do."
"How I could so long a
time be
fancying myself! . . ." cried Harriet, warmly.
"It seems like madness!
I can
see nothing at all extraordinary in him now.--I do
not care whether I meet him or not--except that of the two I
had
rather not see him-- and indeed I would go any distance round
to avoid him--but I do not envy his wife in the least; I
neither admire her nor envy her, as I have done:
she
is very charming, I
dare say, and all
that, but I think her very ill-tempered and
disagreeable--I shall never forget her look the other
night!--However, I
assure you, Miss Woodhouse, I wish her no evil.--No, let them
be
ever so happy together, it will not give me another moment's
pang: and to
convince you that I have
been speaking truth, I am
now going to destroy--what I ought to have destroyed long
ago--what I
ought never to have kept-- I know that very well (blushing as
she
spoke).--However, now I will destroy it all--and it is my
particular wish to do it in your presence, that you may see
how
rational I am grown. Cannot you guess what this parcel
holds?" said she, with a conscious look.
"Not the least in the
world.--Did
he ever give you any thing?"
"No--I cannot call them
gifts; but
they are things that I have valued very much."
She held the parcel
towards her, and
Emma read the words Most precious
treasures on the top.
Her curiosity
was greatly excited. Harriet unfolded the parcel, and she
looked on with impatience. Within abundance of silver paper
was a
pretty little Tunbridge-ware box, which
Harriet opened: it
was well lined with the softest
cotton; but, excepting the cotton, Emma saw only
a small piece of court-plaister.
"Now," said Harriet,
"you
must recollect."
"No, indeed I do not."
"Dear me! I
should not have thought it possible you
could forget what passed in this very room about
court-plaister, one of the very last times we ever met in
it!--It
was
but a very few days before I had my sore throat--just before
Mr.
and
Mrs. John Knightley came-- I think the very evening.--Do not
you
remember his cutting his finger with your new penknife, and
your
recommending court-plaister?-- But, as you had none about you,
and
knew
I had, you desired me to supply him; and so I took mine out
and cut him a piece; but it was a great deal too large, and he
cut it smaller, and kept playing some time with what was left,
before he gave it back to me. And so then, in my nonsense, I
could
not
help making a treasure of it-- so I put it by never to be
used,
and
looked at it now and then as a great treat."
"My dearest Harriet!"
cried
Emma, putting her hand before her face, and jumping up, "you
make
me more
ashamed of myself than I can bear. Remember it? Aye, I remember it all
now; all, except your
saving this relic--I knew nothing of that till
this moment--but the cutting the finger, and my recommending
court-plaister, and saying I had none about me!--Oh! my sins,
my
sins!--And I
had plenty all the while in my pocket!--One of my senseless
tricks!--I deserve to be under a continual blush all the rest
of
my
life.--Well--(sitting down again)-- go on--what else?"
"And had you really some
at hand
yourself? I am sure
I never suspected
it, you did it so
naturally."
"And so you actually put
this piece
of court-plaister by for his sake!" said Emma, recovering from
her
state of
shame and feeling divided between wonder and amusement. And secretly she added to
herself, "Lord
bless me! when should I ever
have thought of putting by in cotton a piece of court-plaister that
Frank
Churchill had been pulling about! I never was equal to this."
"Here," resumed Harriet,
turning to her box again, "here is something still more
valuable,
I mean
that has been more valuable, because this is what did really
once
belong to him, which the court-plaister never did."
Emma was quite eager to
see this
superior treasure. It
was the end of
an old pencil,--the part without any
lead.
"This was really his,"
said
Harriet.--"Do not you remember one morning?--no, I dare say
you do
not. But one
morning--I
forget exactly the day--but perhaps it was the
Tuesday or Wednesday before that evening, he wanted to make a
memorandum in his pocket-book; it was about spruce-beer. Mr.
Knightley
had been telling him something about brewing spruce-beer, and
he wanted to put it down; but when he took out his pencil,
there
was so little lead that he soon cut it all away, and it would
not
do, so you lent him another, and this was left upon the table
as
good
for nothing. But I
kept my eye on it;
and, as soon as I dared,
caught it up, and never parted with it again from that
moment."
"I do remember it,"
cried
Emma; "I perfectly remember it.-- Talking about
spruce-beer.--Oh!
yes--Mr.
Knightley and I both saying we liked it, and Mr. Elton's
seeming
resolved to learn to like it too. I perfectly remember
it.--Stop;
Mr.
Knightley was standing just here, was not he?
I have an idea he was standing just
here."
"Ah!
I do not
know. I cannot
recollect.--It is very
odd, but I cannot recollect.--Mr. Elton was
sitting here, I remember, much about where I am now."--
"Well, go on."
"Oh! that's all. I
have nothing more to shew you, or to say-- except that I am
now
going to throw them
both behind the fire, and I wish you to see me do it."
"My poor dear Harriet!
and have you
actually found happiness in treasuring up these things?"
"Yes, simpleton as I
was!--but I am
quite ashamed of it now, and wish I could forget as easily as
I
can burn
them. It was very
wrong of me, you
know, to keep any
remembrances, after he was married. I knew it was--but had not
resolution
enough to part with them."
"But, Harriet, is it
necessary to
burn the court-plaister?--I have not a word to say for the bit
of
old
pencil, but the court-plaister might be useful."
"I shall be happier to
burn
it," replied Harriet. "It
has a
disagreeable look to me. I
must get rid of
every thing.-- There it goes, and there is an end,
thank Heaven! of Mr. Elton."
"And when," thought
Emma,
"will there be a beginning of Mr. Churchill?"
She had soon afterwards
reason to
believe that the beginning was already made, and could not but
hope
that the gipsy, though she had told no fortune, might be
proved to
have
made Harriet's.--About a fortnight after the alarm, they came
to
a sufficient explanation, and quite undesignedly. Emma was not thinking of
it at the moment, which made
the information she received
more valuable. She merely said, in the course of some
trivial chat, "Well, Harriet, whenever you marry I would advise you to
do so and so"--and thought no more of it, till after a
minute's
silence she heard Harriet say in a very serious tone, "I
shall never marry."
Emma then looked up, and
immediately saw
how it was; and after a moment's debate, as to whether it
should
pass unnoticed or not, replied,
"Never marry!--This is a
new
resolution."
"It is one that I shall
never
change, however."
After another short
hesitation, "I
hope it does not proceed from-- I hope it is not in compliment
to
Mr.
Elton?"
"Mr. Elton indeed!"
cried Harriet
indignantly.--"Oh! no"--and Emma could just catch the words,
"so
superior to Mr. Elton!"
She then took a longer
time for
consideration. Should
she proceed no
farther?--should she let it pass, and
seem to suspect nothing?-- Perhaps Harriet might think her
cold or
angry if she did; or perhaps if she were totally silent,
it might only drive Harriet into asking her to hear too
much; and against any thing like such an unreserve as had
been,
such
an open and frequent discussion of hopes and chances, she was
perfectly resolved.-- She believed it would be wiser for her
to say and know at once, all that she meant to say and know. Plain dealing was always
best. She had
previously determined how far
she would proceed, on any application of the sort; and it
would be safer for both, to have the judicious law of her own
brain laid down with speed.-- She was decided, and thus spoke--
"Harriet, I will not
affect to be
in doubt of your meaning. Your resolution, or rather your
expectation of never marrying, results from an idea that the
person
whom you might prefer, would be too greatly your superior in
situation to think of you. Is not it so?"
"Oh!
Miss
Woodhouse, believe me I have not the
presumption to suppose-- Indeed I am not so mad.--But it is a
pleasure to me to admire him at a distance--and to think of
his
infinite superiority to all the rest of the world, with the
gratitude, wonder, and veneration, which are so proper, in me
especially."
"I am not at all
surprised at you,
Harriet. The
service he rendered you
was enough to warm your heart."
"Service! oh! it was
such an
inexpressible obligation!-- The very recollection of it, and
all
that I felt at the time-- when I saw him coming--his noble
look--and my wretchedness before. Such a change! In one moment such a
change! From
perfect misery to perfect happiness!"
"It is very natural. It
is natural, and it is honourable.-- Yes, honourable, I think,
to
chuse so
well and so gratefully.-- But that it will be a fortunate
preference
is more that I can promise. I do not advise you to give way to it,
Harriet. I do not
by any means engage
for its being
returned. Consider
what you are
about. Perhaps it will be wisest in you to
check your feelings while you can: at any rate do not let them
carry you
far, unless you are persuaded of his liking you. Be observant of him. Let his
behaviour be the guide of your sensations.
I
give you this caution now, because I shall never speak to you
again on the
subject. I am
determined
against all interference. Henceforward
I
know nothing of the matter. Let no name ever pass our lips. We were very wrong
before; we will be
cautious now.--He is your
superior, no doubt, and there do seem objections and obstacles
of
a
very serious nature; but yet, Harriet, more wonderful things
have taken place, there have been matches of greater disparity. But take care of
yourself. I would not
have you too sanguine;
though, however it may end, be assured your raising your
thoughts
to
him, is a mark of good taste which I shall always know how to
value."
Harriet kissed her hand
in silent and
submissive gratitude. Emma was very decided in thinking such
an attachment no bad thing for her friend.
Its
tendency would be to raise and refine her
mind-- and it must be saving her from the
danger of degradation.
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