VOLUME II
2. CHAPTER II
 (continued)
Emma was sorry;--to have to pay civilities to a person she did
 not like through three long months!--to be always doing more than
 she wished, and less than she ought!  Why she did not like Jane
 Fairfax might be a difficult question to answer; Mr. Knightley
 had once told her it was because she saw in her the really
 accomplished young woman, which she wanted to be thought herself;
 and though the accusation had been eagerly refuted at the time,
 there were moments of self-examination in which her conscience could
 not quite acquit her.  But "she could never get acquainted with her:
 she did not know how it was, but there was such coldness and reserve--
 such apparent indifference whether she pleased or not--and then,
 her aunt was such an eternal talker!--and she was made such a fuss
 with by every body!--and it had been always imagined that they were
 to be so intimate--because their ages were the same, every body had
 supposed they must be so fond of each other."  These were her reasons--
 she had no better. 
It was a dislike so little just--every imputed fault was so magnified
 by fancy, that she never saw Jane Fairfax the first time after any
 considerable absence, without feeling that she had injured her;
 and now, when the due visit was paid, on her arrival, after a two years'
 interval, she was particularly struck with the very appearance
 and manners, which for those two whole years she had been depreciating.
 Jane Fairfax was very elegant, remarkably elegant; and she had
 herself the highest value for elegance.  Her height was pretty,
 just such as almost every body would think tall, and nobody could
 think very tall; her figure particularly graceful; her size a most
 becoming medium, between fat and thin, though a slight appearance
 of ill-health seemed to point out the likeliest evil of the two.
 Emma could not but feel all this; and then, her face--her features--
 there was more beauty in them altogether than she had remembered;
 it was not regular, but it was very pleasing beauty.  Her eyes,
 a deep grey, with dark eye-lashes and eyebrows, had never been denied
 their praise; but the skin, which she had been used to cavil at,
 as wanting colour, had a clearness and delicacy which really needed
 no fuller bloom.  It was a style of beauty, of which elegance
 was the reigning character, and as such, she must, in honour,
 by all her principles, admire it:--elegance, which, whether of person
 or of mind, she saw so little in Highbury.  There, not to be vulgar,
 was distinction, and merit. 
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