VOLUME III
3. CHAPTER III
 (continued)
In this state Frank Churchill had found her, she trembling
 and conditioning, they loud and insolent.  By a most fortunate
 chance his leaving Highbury had been delayed so as to bring him
 to her assistance at this critical moment.  The pleasantness
 of the morning had induced him to walk forward, and leave his
 horses to meet him by another road, a mile or two beyond Highbury--
 and happening to have borrowed a pair of scissors the night before
 of Miss Bates, and to have forgotten to restore them, he had
 been obliged to stop at her door, and go in for a few minutes:
 he was therefore later than he had intended; and being on foot,
 was unseen by the whole party till almost close to them.
 The terror which the woman and boy had been creating in Harriet
 was then their own portion.  He had left them completely frightened;
 and Harriet eagerly clinging to him, and hardly able to speak,
 had just strength enough to reach Hartfield, before her spirits
 were quite overcome.  It was his idea to bring her to Hartfield:
 he had thought of no other place. 
This was the amount of the whole story,--of his communication and
 of Harriet's as soon as she had recovered her senses and speech.--
 He dared not stay longer than to see her well; these several delays
 left him not another minute to lose; and Emma engaging to give
 assurance of her safety to Mrs. Goddard, and notice of there
 being such a set of people in the neighbourhood to Mr. Knightley,
 he set off, with all the grateful blessings that she could utter
 for her friend and herself. 
Such an adventure as this,--a fine young man and a lovely young
 woman thrown together in such a way, could hardly fail of suggesting
 certain ideas to the coldest heart and the steadiest brain.
 So Emma thought, at least.  Could a linguist, could a grammarian,
 could even a mathematician have seen what she did, have witnessed their
 appearance together, and heard their history of it, without feeling
 that circumstances had been at work to make them peculiarly interesting
 to each other?--How much more must an imaginist, like herself,
 be on fire with speculation and foresight!--especially with such
 a groundwork of anticipation as her mind had already made. 
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