[Emma by Jane Austine]@TWC D-Link bookEmma CHAPTERIV
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What is passable in youth is detestable in later age.
Mr.Martin is now awkward and abrupt; what will he be at Mr. Weston's time of life ?" "There is no saying, indeed," replied Harriet rather solemnly. "But there may be pretty good guessing.
He will be a completely gross, vulgar farmer, totally inattentive to appearances, and thinking of nothing but profit and loss." "Will he, indeed? That will be very bad." "How much his business engrosses him already is very plain from the circumstance of his forgetting to inquire for the book you recommended. He was a great deal too full of the market to think of any thing else--which is just as it should be, for a thriving man.
What has he to do with books? And I have no doubt that he _will_ thrive, and be a very rich man in time--and his being illiterate and coarse need not disturb _us_." "I wonder he did not remember the book"-- was all Harriet's answer, and spoken with a degree of grave displeasure which Emma thought might be safely left to itself.
She, therefore, said no more for some time.
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