"Admirable!" he said. "A walk! Exercise! Just the thing."

"Do you not think her complexion has been brightened by it?" she pressed him, as he did not follow up her hint.

It was at this moment I began to suspect her motives for encouraging him to notice her friend, and to think that she wanted to make a match between Harriet and Elton!

I did not know whether to feel annoyance or pity. Emma had mistaken her man if she thought Elton would marry a parlour boarder, a young girl without name, birth or dowry to recommend her.

Elton had no suspicion, however, and was, as always, eager to defer to Miss Woodhouse of Hartfield.

"Indeed I do. I noticed her complexion particularly. Why, it has been brightened by fresh air and exercise! I thought as I came into the room. It was just what she needed to bring out her beauty. So good of you to take the trouble!"

"I am sure it was good of Harriet to take the time to walk with me," she said, firmly turning the conversation back to Harriet’s advantages.

Hah! I thought in amusement. Now, Elton, turn that into a compliment to Emma if you can!

I continued to be amused by them, as they carried on at cross purposes for the next quarter of an hour, Emma trying to make a match between a glove and a mitten, and Elton to raise his standing in the village by flattering Miss Woodhouse. I waited for them to grow tired of it, but as they showed no signs of doing so, at last I emerged from my newspaper and forced them to engage in more general and rational conversation.


Friday 27 November

Emma’s matchmaking continued today and Elton, poor man, had no idea of what she was about.

She asked him outright what he thought of her little friend. It was impossible to make anything of his convoluted answer, for although he said how much she had improved, and how she had now acquired the polish she had been wanting, his every remark reflected well on Emma: it was Emma who had improved her; Emma who had given her polish.

As the evening wore on, I began to have a suspicion that Elton was doing more than flattering a well-connected young woman. I began to think he was lifting his eyes to Emma herself.

Perhaps I was imagining it, but there seemed something more than an ill-judged civility in his words, perhaps the admiration of a man who hoped to be admitted as a suitor?

The latter would be interesting indeed! He has no hope of succeeding, but the very idea of his assuming that he has a chance of success will teach Emma a lesson in humility which I can never hope to surpass.

What, Miss Woodhouse of Hartfield to marry Mr. Elton! She would be horrified if she knew. I mean to pay them close attention, and see how things develop!

December

Tuesday 1 December

It seems that Emma’s present interest in sketching is to last for a little longer, at least. I found her taking Harriet’s likeness, as she had intended, when I called on her this morning. Elton, as is usual these days, was in attendance.

Mr. Woodhouse and I withdrew for a time as I helped him to write some letters of business, and then we both returned to the drawing-room. We found Emma and her friend hard at work. Harriet was posing, and Emma’s sketch was already well-developed.

Elton was standing behind Emma, fidgeting, and not knowing what to do with himself.

He spoke to me when I entered the room, seemingly glad of something to say.

"Miss Woodhouse has decided to paint her friend full-length, like the portrait of Mr. John Knightley."

I went over to Emma and looked at what she had done. Mrs. Weston was watching the progress of the drawing, too, and her eye had not failed to see that Emma’s portrait was flattering.

"Miss Woodhouse has given her friend the only beauty she wanted," she said to Elton. "The expression of the eye is most correct, but Harriet has not those eyebrows and eyelashes. It is the fault of her face that she has them not."

"Do you think so?" he replied "I cannot agree with you. It appears to me a most perfect resemblance in every feature. I never saw such a likeness in my life. We must allow for the effect of shade, you know."

Something had to be done to counteract this flattery, and so I said: "You have made her too tall,

Emma."

I could tell by her expression that she knew she had, but she would not admit it.

"Oh, no! certainly not too tall; not in the least too tall. Consider, she is sitting down - which naturally presents a different - which in short gives exactly the idea - and the proportions must be preserved, you know. Proportions, foreshortening. Oh, no! it gives one exactly the idea of such a height as Harriet’s. Exactly so indeed!" said her would-be suitor.

"It is very pretty," said Mr. Woodhouse, always ready to praise his daughter. "So prettily done! Just as your drawings always are, my dear. I do not know anybody who draws so well as you do. The only thing I do not thoroughly like is, that she seems to be sitting out of doors, with only a little shawl over her shoulders. It makes one think she must catch cold."

"But, my dear Papa, it is supposed to be summer; a warm day in summer. Look at the tree."

"But it is never safe to sit out of doors, my dear," said he.

His is a nervous disposition indeed. It not only objects to people sitting out of doors, but it objects to them being drawn as if they were out of doors, when in reality they are sitting inside by a fire!

Elton plunged in again.

"You, sir, may say any thing," he cried, "but I must confess that I regard it as a most happy thought, the placing of Harriet out of doors; and the tree is touched with such inimitable spirit! Any other situation would have been much less in character. The naïvety of Harriet’s manners - and altogether - Oh, it is most admirable! I cannot keep my eyes from it. I never saw such a likeness."

I did not know whether to be amused or exasperated by his nonsense, any more than I knew whether to be amused or exasperated by the way Emma received it. She took it all as compliments for her friend, little perceiving that the flattery was all for her. I am sure of it: Emma is Elton’s object.

If she was not so young, and so dear to me, I would be amused and nothing else, but I am dismayed on Emma’s behalf. She thinks she has only to throw Elton and Harriet together, and Harriet’s pretty face will do the rest. But Elton will settle for a pretty fortune, rather than a pretty face, and oh! Emma, what will you think, when you perceive the truth?

"We must have it framed," said Elton.

"Oh, yes, the very thing," said Emma. "It must be done well. I owe my friend no less."

"Can you not ask Isabella to have it done in London?" asked Mrs. Weston.

This Mr. Woodhouse could not bear.

"She must not stir outside in the fogs of December. She will take cold. I am surprised at your thinking of it," he said to Mrs. Weston reproachfully. "You would never have thought of such a thing if you had stayed here with us at Hartfield."

Mrs. Weston was admonished. I was about to offer my services, as I had to go to London, when Elton stepped in and offered to take it himself.

"You are too good," said Emma, smiling all the while. "I would not think of troubling you."

"It is no trouble."

"If you are sure, then it would be a relief to have someone of superior taste to undertake the commission," she said, and I saw a look of pleasure cross his face. "I would undertake to wrap the picture very well, so that it will not give you too much trouble."

"No trouble is too much. That is to say it is no trouble, no trouble at all," he said. Then finished with a sigh, saying: "What a precious deposit!"

I thought he had gone too far, and I was sure Emma would balk at that, but though she looked rather surprised she said nothing.

I almost said something, but I decided against it, for no doubt the muddle will be cleared up soon.

Harriet will take no hurt from it, for I am sure Emma will not have raised false hopes by mentioning her scheme to her friend - that would be going too far, even for Emma! - but there will be a reckoning with Elton, and I hope Emma will be chastened. Once she stops trying to live Elton’s life, I hope she might put more effort into living her own.


Thursday 3 December

I was more pleased than ever that Emma had given a little polish to Harriet, and that she had removed some of her schoolgirl habits, for I have had a very interesting visit from Robert Martin today. He called at Donwell Abbey this evening and he asked if I could spare him ten minutes. I told him that I could spare him as much time as he needed, thinking he had come to speak to me about the farm. I was much surprised, then, when he stood in front of my desk without any of his usual confidence, indeed much like a schoolboy standing in front of the desk of his master. He turned his hat in his hand as if he did not know where to begin, and I was astonished to see a slight flush spring to his cheek. The cause of his agitation soon became clear.

"I"ve come to ask for your advice, Mr. Knightley," he said.

"I will give you whatever help I can, Robert, you know that," I said.

"Yes, I do."

"What is the matter?" I asked him, to help him on his way.

"It is this way," he said, then added, not very helpfully: "I trust your judgement, Mr. Knightley.

You"ve helped me many a time in the past, and I hope you can help me now." He cleared his throat, and I wondered if he would ever get to the point. "I am beforehand with the world, and doing well with the farm. My mother and sisters want for nothing, I"ve seen to that."

I said nothing, wondering where all this was leading.

"Well, Mr. Knightley, the thing is this. I am of an age to marry, and being so well set up with the farm, and after seeing Harriet - that is, Miss Smith - and her being so pretty and well-spoken, and being a good friend of my sisters, and a favourite with my mother - that is, I am not marrying her for my mother or my sisters but for myself, because a man needs a wife and I am a man..."

He stopped, having tied himself in knots, and I could feel some sympathy for him. I remembered how it was with John, when he proposed to Isabella. He, too, was like a schoolboy when he left the Abbey that morning. His air of address had completely deserted him.

"You do not need my permission to marry, Robert," I said, as he paused.

"No, Mr. Knightley, I know that, I need no man’s permission, but I was just wanting a bit of advice. I was wondering what you would think of me marrying so young, and whether you think I would be wrong to ask Miss Smith, as she is so young, too. And then…" He went as red as a turkey-cock. "The thing is, Mr. Knightley, Miss Smith being a friend of Miss Woodhouse’s, and being so pretty and all, I was wondering if she wasn"t too far above me?"

I was astounded! A penniless girl with no name, being above an honest farmer? A man with a comfortable living and a good name in the neighbourhood?

"Not at all," I told him. I felt I should offer a word of caution. "As long as you are sure you can afford it?"

"Oh, yes, I"ve been into all that, and I"ve talked it over with my mother and sisters, too. They"re as eager for it as I am."

"Then I advise you to marry Miss Smith, with my blessing. She is a pretty young woman with a very sweet nature and, moreover, she seemed to be very contented when I saw her at Abbey Mill Farm.

I am sure you will be very happy together."

"Thank you, Mr. Knightley," he said, with a smile spreading across his face. "She’s the prettiest thing I"ve ever seen, and she has such a taking way with her. I"ll be a lucky man if she"ll have me."

And she will be a lucky girl when she marries you, I thought as he left the room.

It is a very pleasing solution to the situation! Emma’s influence has improved Harriet, and made her more worthy of such a good and solid man, and once Emma knows her friend is to marry Robert Martin, all her nonsensical thoughts regarding Elton will be nipped in the bud. Neither Elton nor Harriet need ever know of the fate she had arranged for them.

Mrs. Weston was right and I was wrong. I worried about nothing. This is a most happy conclusion to events.


Saturday 5 December

I cannot believe it was only yesterday that I was convinced a happy end was in view for Harriet: a poor girl, deposited in a school by unknown parents, to end up, not as an old maid, but as a happy and prosperous wife. And yet it has come to nothing. Because of Harriet? No, because of Emma! I have never been so out of charity with her in my life.