VOLUME I
14. CHAPTER XIV
 (continued)
Emma's project of forgetting Mr. Elton for a while made her rather
 sorry to find, when they had all taken their places, that he was
 close to her.  The difficulty was great of driving his strange
 insensibility towards Harriet, from her mind, while he not only sat
 at her elbow, but was continually obtruding his happy countenance
 on her notice, and solicitously addressing her upon every occasion.
 Instead of forgetting him, his behaviour was such that she could
 not avoid the internal suggestion of "Can it really be as my brother
 imagined? can it be possible for this man to be beginning to transfer
 his affections from Harriet to me?--Absurd and insufferable!"--
 Yet he would be so anxious for her being perfectly warm, would be
 so interested about her father, and so delighted with Mrs. Weston;
 and at last would begin admiring her drawings with so much zeal
 and so little knowledge as seemed terribly like a would-be lover,
 and made it some effort with her to preserve her good manners.
 For her own sake she could not be rude; and for Harriet's, in the hope
 that all would yet turn out right, she was even positively civil;
 but it was an effort; especially as something was going on amongst
 the others, in the most overpowering period of Mr. Elton's nonsense,
 which she particularly wished to listen to.  She heard enough
 to know that Mr. Weston was giving some information about his son;
 she heard the words "my son," and "Frank," and "my son,"
 repeated several times over; and, from a few other half-syllables
 very much suspected that he was announcing an early visit from
 his son; but before she could quiet Mr. Elton, the subject was
 so completely past that any reviving question from her would have
 been awkward. 
Now, it so happened that in spite of Emma's resolution of never marrying,
 there was something in the name, in the idea of Mr. Frank Churchill,
 which always interested her.  She had frequently thought--especially since
 his father's marriage with Miss Taylor--that if she were to marry,
 he was the very person to suit her in age, character and condition.
 He seemed by this connexion between the families, quite to belong to her.
 She could not but suppose it to be a match that every body who knew
 them must think of.  That Mr. and Mrs. Weston did think of it, she was
 very strongly persuaded; and though not meaning to be induced by him,
 or by any body else, to give up a situation which she believed more
 replete with good than any she could change it for, she had a great
 curiosity to see him, a decided intention of finding him pleasant,
 of being liked by him to a certain degree, and a sort of pleasure
 in the idea of their being coupled in their friends' imaginations. 
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