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Emma - Volume 3 JaneAusten 5870K 2023-09-01

"I am sure you were of use to htly by you--oftener than I would own at the tiood And if poor little Anna Weston is to be spoiled, it will be the greatest humanity in you to do asin love with her when she is thirteen"

"How often, when you were a girl, have you said toto do so-and-so; papa says Iwhich, you knew, I did not approve In such cases s instead of one"

"What an amiable creature I was!--No wonder you should hold htley'--You always called htley;' and, from habit, it has not so very formal a sound--And yet it is for else, but I do not knohat"

"I ree,' in one of ht it would offend you; but, as you ain"

"And cannot you call e' now?"

"Ihtley' I will not proant terseness of Mrs Elton, by calling you Mr K--But I will pro--"I will promise to call you once by your Christian nauess where;--in the building in which N takes M for better, for worse"

Erieved that she could not be more openly just to one important service which his better sense would have rendered her, to the advice which would have saved her from the worst of all her womanly follies--her wilful intimacy with Harriet Smith; but it was too tender a subject--She could not enter on it-- Harriet was very seldoht ht of; but Emma was rather inclined to attribute it to delicacy, and a suspicion, fro She are herself, that, parting under any other circumstances, they certainly should have corresponded ence would not have rested, as it now alht observe that it was so