id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_xx4lbmv54rbo7evmtfensyqk7e K. Halsey The Blush of Modesty or the Blush of Shame? Reading Jane Austen's Blushes 2006 13 .pdf application/pdf 7506 503 73 Mary Wollstonecraft's Female Reader (1789) makes it clear that there is a relationship between blushes and ''mental charms'' when it assures young women that ladies learning Latin arises.21 Conventionally, modesty, innocence and intelligence can thus all be denoted by a blush, which the informed reader will This link between blushing and sexual knowledge, or, more accurately, knowingness, forms another kind of narrative bond between narrator and reader, the about Mr Frank Churchill'', Emma interprets Harriet's blushes as mortification from Mr Dixon), Emma interprets Miss Fairfax's ''blush of consciousness with come out, Mrs Weston, too, can understand Jane's blushes, telling Emma: blush conceals Harriet's liking for Mr Knightley as well as Emma's guilt at being interpretative games with the reader, Austen's use of blushes in Emma teaches us READING JANE AUSTEN'S BLUSHES 237 READING JANE AUSTEN'S BLUSHES 237 READING JANE AUSTEN'S BLUSHES 237 READING JANE AUSTEN'S BLUSHES 237 READING JANE AUSTEN'S BLUSHES 237 READING JANE AUSTEN'S BLUSHES 237 ./cache/work_xx4lbmv54rbo7evmtfensyqk7e.pdf ./txt/work_xx4lbmv54rbo7evmtfensyqk7e.txt