VOLUME II
6. CHAPTER VI
 (continued)
At last he was persuaded to move on from the front of the Crown;
 and being now almost facing the house where the Bateses lodged,
 Emma recollected his intended visit the day before, and asked him
 if he had paid it. 
"Yes, oh! yes"--he replied; "I was just going to mention it.
 A very successful visit:--I saw all the three ladies; and felt very
 much obliged to you for your preparatory hint.  If the talking aunt
 had taken me quite by surprize, it must have been the death of me.
 As it was, I was only betrayed into paying a most unreasonable visit.
 Ten minutes would have been all that was necessary, perhaps all that
 was proper; and I had told my father I should certainly be at home
 before him--but there was no getting away, no pause; and, to my
 utter astonishment, I found, when he (finding me nowhere else)
 joined me there at last, that I had been actually sitting with them
 very nearly three-quarters of an hour.  The good lady had not given me
 the possibility of escape before." 
"And how did you think Miss Fairfax looking?" 
"Ill, very ill--that is, if a young lady can ever be allowed to look ill.
 But the expression is hardly admissible, Mrs. Weston, is it?
 Ladies can never look ill.  And, seriously, Miss Fairfax is naturally
 so pale, as almost always to give the appearance of ill health.--
 A most deplorable want of complexion." 
Emma would not agree to this, and began a warm defence of Miss
 Fairfax's complexion.  "It was certainly never brilliant, but she
 would not allow it to have a sickly hue in general; and there was
 a softness and delicacy in her skin which gave peculiar elegance
 to the character of her face."  He listened with all due deference;
 acknowledged that he had heard many people say the same--but yet he
 must confess, that to him nothing could make amends for the want
 of the fine glow of health.  Where features were indifferent,
 a fine complexion gave beauty to them all; and where they were good,
 the effect was--fortunately he need not attempt to describe what the
 effect was. 
"Well," said Emma, "there is no disputing about taste.--At least
 you admire her except her complexion." 
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