Emma
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:15:02
Oh, bIast ! I forgot.
:15:05
But I go again tomorrow,
:15:07
and I wiII make every effort
to get that thought into my head.

:15:11
How's your mother ?
:15:13
[ Thinking ] ReaIIy, Harriet,
we can do better than this.

:15:17
[ Emma ]
If you puII this way, dear,

:15:20
you'II find it makes
a neater stitch.

:15:25
Of course !
:15:29
May I ask what you thought
of my friend, Robert Martin ?

:15:33
WeII, dear,
:15:35
I imagined him
a degree nearer gentiIity.

:15:40
True. He's not so genteeI
as Mr. KnightIey, but--

:15:44
No !
:15:46
Not one in a hundred men
has ''gentIeman''...

:15:48
so pIainIy written across him
as Mr. KnightIey.

:15:51
But Iet us judge him next to
another man. Oh, say... Mr. EIton.

:15:57
Mr. EIton is a fine man.
:15:59
ThoughtfuI in ways
Mr. Martin can never be.

:16:02
Miss Woodhouse, whatever his fauIts,
Mr. Martin is thoughtfuI.

:16:05
I see.
:16:07
Did he take your advice and get
the book you asked him to read ?

:16:13
Um--
:16:16
WeII... no.
:16:19
Yes.
:16:21
Yes !
:16:24
I wonder that he
did not remember it.

:16:26
Oh, weII.
:16:31
Mr. EIton said something very kind
about you the other day.

:16:37
- Can you not teII me what it was ?
- Oh !

:16:39
It is not my pIace to intrude
in personaI matters.

:16:51
But, as your friend, I couId
make an exception if you wish.


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