<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0039" id="link2HCH0039"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER III </h2>
<p>This little explanation with Mr. Knightley gave Emma considerable
pleasure. It was one of the agreeable recollections of the ball, which she
walked about the lawn the next morning to enjoy.—She was extremely
glad that they had come to so good an understanding respecting the Eltons,
and that their opinions of both husband and wife were so much alike; and
his praise of Harriet, his concession in her favour, was peculiarly
gratifying. The impertinence of the Eltons, which for a few minutes had
threatened to ruin the rest of her evening, had been the occasion of some
of its highest satisfactions; and she looked forward to another happy
result—the cure of Harriet's infatuation.—From Harriet's
manner of speaking of the circumstance before they quitted the ballroom,
she had strong hopes. It seemed as if her eyes were suddenly opened, and
she were enabled to see that Mr. Elton was not the superior creature she
had believed him. The fever was over, and Emma could harbour little fear
of the pulse being quickened again by injurious courtesy. She depended on
the evil feelings of the Eltons for supplying all the discipline of
pointed neglect that could be farther requisite.—Harriet rational,
Frank Churchill not too much in love, and Mr. Knightley not wanting to
quarrel with her, how very happy a summer must be before her!</p>
<p>She was not to see Frank Churchill this morning. He had told her that he
could not allow himself the pleasure of stopping at Hartfield, as he was
to be at home by the middle of the day. She did not regret it.</p>
<p>Having arranged all these matters, looked them through, and put them all
to rights, she was just turning to the house with spirits freshened up for
the demands of the two little boys, as well as of their grandpapa, when
the great iron sweep-gate opened, and two persons entered whom she had
never less expected to see together—Frank Churchill, with Harriet
leaning on his arm—actually Harriet!—A moment sufficed to
convince her that something extraordinary had happened. Harriet looked
white and frightened, and he was trying to cheer her.—The iron gates
and the front-door were not twenty yards asunder;—they were all
three soon in the hall, and Harriet immediately sinking into a chair
fainted away.</p>
<p>A young lady who faints, must be recovered; questions must be answered,
and surprizes be explained. Such events are very interesting, but the
suspense of them cannot last long. A few minutes made Emma acquainted with
the whole.</p>
<p>Miss Smith, and Miss Bickerton, another parlour boarder at Mrs. Goddard's,
who had been also at the ball, had walked out together, and taken a road,
the Richmond road, which, though apparently public enough for safety, had
led them into alarm.—About half a mile beyond Highbury, making a
sudden turn, and deeply shaded by elms on each side, it became for a
considerable stretch very retired; and when the young ladies had advanced
some way into it, they had suddenly perceived at a small distance before
them, on a broader patch of greensward by the side, a party of gipsies. A
child on the watch, came towards them to beg; and Miss Bickerton,
excessively frightened, gave a great scream, and calling on Harriet to
follow her, ran up a steep bank, cleared a slight hedge at the top, and
made the best of her way by a short cut back to Highbury. But poor Harriet
could not follow. She had suffered very much from cramp after dancing, and
her first attempt to mount the bank brought on such a return of it as made
her absolutely powerless—and in this state, and exceedingly
terrified, she had been obliged to remain.</p>
<p>How the trampers might have behaved, had the young ladies been more
courageous, must be doubtful; but such an invitation for attack could not
be resisted; and Harriet was soon assailed by half a dozen children,
headed by a stout woman and a great boy, all clamorous, and impertinent in
look, though not absolutely in word.—More and more frightened, she
immediately promised them money, and taking out her purse, gave them a
shilling, and begged them not to want more, or to use her ill.—She
was then able to walk, though but slowly, and was moving away—but
her terror and her purse were too tempting, and she was followed, or
rather surrounded, by the whole gang, demanding more.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>It was a very extraordinary thing! Nothing of the sort had ever occurred
before to any young ladies in the place, within her memory; no rencontre,
no alarm of the kind;—and now it had happened to the very person,
and at the very hour, when the other very person was chancing to pass by
to rescue her!—It certainly was very extraordinary!—And
knowing, as she did, the favourable state of mind of each at this period,
it struck her the more. He was wishing to get the better of his attachment
to herself, she just recovering from her mania for Mr. Elton. It seemed as
if every thing united to promise the most interesting consequences. It was
not possible that the occurrence should not be strongly recommending each
to the other.</p>
<p>In the few minutes' conversation which she had yet had with him, while
Harriet had been partially insensible, he had spoken of her terror, her
naivete, her fervour as she seized and clung to his arm, with a
sensibility amused and delighted; and just at last, after Harriet's own
account had been given, he had expressed his indignation at the abominable
folly of Miss Bickerton in the warmest terms. Every thing was to take its
natural course, however, neither impelled nor assisted. She would not stir
a step, nor drop a hint. No, she had had enough of interference. There
could be no harm in a scheme, a mere passive scheme. It was no more than a
wish. Beyond it she would on no account proceed.</p>
<p>Emma's first resolution was to keep her father from the knowledge of what
had passed,—aware of the anxiety and alarm it would occasion: but
she soon felt that concealment must be impossible. Within half an hour it
was known all over Highbury. It was the very event to engage those who
talk most, the young and the low; and all the youth and servants in the
place were soon in the happiness of frightful news. The last night's ball
seemed lost in the gipsies. Poor Mr. Woodhouse trembled as he sat, and, as
Emma had foreseen, would scarcely be satisfied without their promising
never to go beyond the shrubbery again. It was some comfort to him that
many inquiries after himself and Miss Woodhouse (for his neighbours knew
that he loved to be inquired after), as well as Miss Smith, were coming in
during the rest of the day; and he had the pleasure of returning for
answer, that they were all very indifferent—which, though not
exactly true, for she was perfectly well, and Harriet not much otherwise,
Emma would not interfere with. She had an unhappy state of health in
general for the child of such a man, for she hardly knew what
indisposition was; and if he did not invent illnesses for her, she could
make no figure in a message.</p>
<p>The gipsies did not wait for the operations of justice; they took
themselves off in a hurry. The young ladies of Highbury might have walked
again in safety before their panic began, and the whole history dwindled
soon into a matter of little importance but to Emma and her nephews:—in
her imagination it maintained its ground, and Henry and John were still
asking every day for the story of Harriet and the gipsies, and still
tenaciously setting her right if she varied in the slightest particular
from the original recital.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />