VOLUME II
5. CHAPTER V
 (continued)
"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. 
 |