id author title date pages extension mime words sentence flesch summary cache txt austen-emma_021-1815 austen austen-emma_021-1815 1815 .txt text/plain 3968 203 84 Emma could not forgive her;--but as neither provocation nor resentment were discerned by Mr. Knightley, who had been of the party, and had seen only proper attention and pleasing behaviour on each side, he was expressing the next morning, being at Hartfield again on business with Mr. Woodhouse, his approbation of the whole; not so openly as he might have done had her father been out of the room, but speaking plain enough to be very intelligible to Emma. Mr. Knightley looked as if he were more gratified than he cared to express; and before he could make any reply, Mr. Woodhouse, whose thoughts were on the Bates's, said-- It is a great pity that their circumstances should be so confined! cache/austen-emma_021-1815.txt txt/austen-emma_021-1815.txt