Emma (version 4)

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Jane Austen 1816
English
  • 1-01 Volume 1, Chapter 1
  • 1-02 Volume 1, Chapter 2
  • 1-03 Volume 1, Chapter 3
  • 1-04 Volume 1, Chapter 4
  • 1-05 Volume 1, Chapter 5
  • 1-06 Volume 1, Chapter 6
  • 1-07 Volume 1, Chapter 7
  • 1-08 Volume 1, Chapter 8
  • 1-09 Volume 1, Chapter 9
  • 1-10 Volume 1, Chapter 10
  • 1-11 Volume 1, Chapter 11
  • 1-12 Volume 1, Chapter 12
  • 1-13 Volume 1, Chapter 13
  • 1-14 Volume 1, Chapter 14
  • 1-15 Volume 1, Chapter 15
  • 1-16 Volume 1, Chapter 16
  • 1-17 Volume 1, Chapter 17
  • 1-18 Volume 1, Chapter 18
  • 2-01 Volume 2, Chapter 1
  • 2-02 Volume 2, Chapter 2
  • 2-03 Volume 2, Chapter 3
  • 2-04 Volume 2, Chapter 4
  • 2-05 Volume 2, Chapter 5
  • 2-06 Volume 2, Chapter 6
  • 2-07 Volume 2, Chapter 7
  • 2-08 Volume 2, Chapter 8
  • 2-09 Volume 2, Chapter 9
  • 2-10 Volume 2, Chapter 10
  • 2-11 Volume 2, Chapter 11
  • 2-12 Volume 2, Chapter 12
  • 2-13 Volume 2, Chapter 13
  • 2-14 Volume 2, Chapter 14
  • 2-15 Volume 2, Chapter 15
  • 2-16 Volume 2, Chapter 16
  • 2-17 Volume 2, Chapter 17
  • 2-18 Volume 2, Chapter 18
  • 3-01 Volume 3, Chapter 1
  • 3-02 Volume 3, Chapter 2
  • 3-03 Volume 3, Chapter 3
  • 3-04 Volume 3, Chapter 4
  • 3-05 Volume 3, Chapter 5
  • 3-06 Volume 3, Chapter 6
  • 3-07 Volume 3, Chapter 7
  • 3-08 Volume 3, Chapter 8
  • 3-09 Volume 3, Chapter 9
  • 3-10 Volume 3, Chapter 10
  • 3-11 Volume 3, Chapter 11
  • 3-12 Volume 3, Chapter 12
  • 3-13 Volume 3, Chapter 13
  • 3-14 Volume 3, Chapter 14
  • 3-15 Volume 3, Chapter 15
  • 3-16 Volume 3, Chapter 16
  • 3-17 Volume 3, Chapter 17
  • 3-18 Volume 3, Chapter 18
  • 3-19 Volume 3, Chapter 19
Emma, by Jane Austen, is a novel about youthful hubris and the perils of misconstrued romance. As in her other novels, Austen explores the concerns and difficulties of genteel women living in Georgian-Regency England; she also creates a lively comedy of manners.

Before she began the novel, Austen wrote, "I am going to take a heroine whom no one but myself will much like." In the very first sentence she introduces the title character as "Emma Woodhouse, handsome, clever, and rich." Emma, however, is also spoiled, headstrong, and self-satisfied; she greatly overestimates her own matchmaking abilities; she is blind to the dangers of meddling in other people's lives, and her imagination often leads her astray. (Summary by Wikipedia and Kara)

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