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The
invitation was everywhere so well received, that it seemed as if, like Mrs.
Elton, they were all taking the scheme as a particular compliment to
themselves.--Emma and Harriet professed very high expectations of pleasure from
it; and Mr. Weston, unasked, promised to get Frank over to join them, if
possible; a proof of approbation and gratitude which could have been dispensed
with.-- Mr. Knightley was then obliged to say that he should be glad to see him;
and Mr. Weston engaged to lose no time in writing, and spare no arguments to
induce him to come.
Weston engaged to lose no time in writing, and spare
no arguments to induce him to come. In the meanwhile the lame horse recovered so
fast, that the party to Box Hill was again under happy consideration; and at
last Donwell was settled for one day, and Box Hill for the next,--the weather
appearing exactly right. Under a bright mid-day sun, at almost Midsummer, Mr.
Woodhouse was safely conveyed in his carriage, with one window down, to partake
of this al-fresco party; and in one of the most comfortable rooms in the Abbey,
especially prepared for him by a fire all the morning, he was happily placed,
quite at his ease, ready to talk with pleasure of what had been achieved, and
advise every body to come and sit down, and not to heat themselves.-
-
Mrs. Weston, who seemed to have walked there on purpose to be tired, and sit all
the time with him, remained, when all the others were invited or persuaded out,
his patient listener and sympathiser. It was so long since Emma had been at the
Abbey, that as soon as she was satisfied of her father's comfort, she was glad
to leave him, and look around her; eager to refresh and correct her memory with
more particular observation, more exact understanding of a house and grounds
which must ever be so interesting to her and all her family.
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He was studying for an examination for an appointment. "He shall be my
summer gauk," she said; and she took the delicate Flower and laid it in a piece
of scented paper, on which verses were written, beginning with summer gauk and
ending with summer gauk. "My friend, be a winter gauk." She had twitted him with
the summer. Yes, all this was in the verses, and the paper was folded up like a
letter, and the Flower was folded in the letter, too. It was dark around her,
dark as in those days when she lay hidden in the bulb.
It was dark around
her, dark as in those days when she lay hidden in the bulb. The Flower went
forth on her journey, and lay in the post-bag, and was pressed and crushed,
which was not at all pleasant; but that soon came to an end. The journey was
over; the letter was opened, and read by the dear friend. How pleased he was! He
kissed the letter, and it was laid, with its enclosure of verses, in a box, in
which there were many beautiful verses, but all of them without flowers; she was
the first, the only one, as the Sunbeams had called her; and it was a pleasant
thing to think of that.
She had time enough, moreover, to think about
it; she thought of it while the summer passed away, and the long winter went by,
and the summer came again, before she appeared once more. But now the young man
was not pleased at all. He took hold of the letter very roughly, and threw the
verses away, so that the Flower fell on the ground. Flat and faded she certainly
was, but why should she be thrown on the ground? Still, it was better to be here
than in the fire, where the verses and the paper were being burnt to
ashes.
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A clap
of thunder, loud and awful, resounded through the trembling air. All around him
fell into ruin. The lovely fairy, the beautiful garden, sunk deeper and deeper.
The prince saw it sinking down in the dark night till it shone only like a star
in the distance beneath him. Then he felt a coldness, like death, creeping over
him; his eyes closed, and he became insensible. When he recovered, a chilling
rain was beating upon him, and a sharp wind blew on his head. "Alas! what have I
done?" he sighed; "I have sinned like Adam, and the garden of paradise has sunk
into the earth."
"Alas! what have I done?" he sighed; "I have sinned like
Adam, and the garden of paradise has sunk into the earth." He opened his eyes,
and saw the star in the distance, but it was the morning star in heaven which
glittered in the darkness. Presently he stood up and found himself in the depths
of the forest, close to the cavern of the Winds, and the mother of the Winds sat
by his side. She looked angry, and raised her arm in the air as she spoke. "The
very first evening!" she said.
"Well, I expected it! If you were my son,
you should go into the sack." "And there he will have to go at last," said a
strong old man, with large black wings, and a scythe in his hand, whose name was
Death. "He shall be laid in his coffin, but not yet. I will allow him to wander
about the world for a while, to atone for his sin, and to give him time to
become better. But I shall return when he least expects me. I shall lay him in a
black coffin, place it on my head, and fly away with it beyond the
stars.
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