Evening Dress, 1815 (Rudolph Ackermann)

Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

Just before the excerpt from No Other Choice that I am sharing below, Mary was struggling to pick out the patterns she needed to have selected by her appointment time with Mrs. Havelston the following day. Lord Rycroft, Darcy’s cousin, took it upon himself to help her make her selections. Perhaps this gown in similar to one he selected. He did say that green would suit her.

So why didn’t I pair this image with the part right before it? Because I think this one, which does mention the book of patterns and is the first part of chapter four, shows how Lord Rycroft’s opinion of Miss Mary is shifting to something less like a friend and more towards a lady he loves. Not that he is aware of that just yet, and not that she has even stopped to consider him as an option. Perhaps if he could keep from insulting her, it might help?

Enjoy.

Continue reading Evening Dress, 1815 (Rudolph Ackermann)

Old Books (Catherine M. Wood)

Old Books by Catherine M. Wood (1857-1939), Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

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This painting has just so many interesting details! One could study it for quite some time… or at least, I could. 🙂 While I’m nearly certain there wouldn’t be any cluttered tables like this in the Netherfield library or any of those in houses owned by Mr. Darcy, I could see something like this in Mr. Bennet’s study – an assortment of all the interesting things he is studying – moving from one to another and back again. There’s also what appears to be a will in this painting, and I thought that was fitting for the book I’m highlighting in this post today.

At the beginning of Her Father’s Choice, Elizabeth and Darcy are very conveniently found together and alone in the library at Netherfield during Bingley’s ball by someone who is sure to spread what she has discovered to anyone who will listen and at a volume that will make it difficult for anyone not to hear her. There is no option for Darcy and Elizabeth but to marry. It is not an idea that is disagreeable to Darcy, but to Elizabeth, it’s quite disagreeable.

Despite her tears, she agrees that it must be done, and so our couples path to happily ever after together begins. Below is a look at what transpires between Darcy and Bingley in the library after Elizabeth has agreed to marry Darcy.

Enjoy!

Darcy paced the library as he waited for Bingley. He mulled Elizabeth’s words over in his mind. Not at all proud and exceedingly kind. She had seemed surprised to find him so.

“Am I proud?” he blurted as Bingley entered the room.

“Not improperly so.” Bingley removed his jacket and unbuttoned his waistcoat before lowering himself into a chair with a sigh. “Of course, people have to get to know you before they realize it.”

“What do you mean?” Darcy stopped in front of Bingley’s chair and looked down at him.

“Your serious expression and reserve can be misunderstood as being aloof and disdainful.”

Darcy pondered that for a moment. He could see how that could be. Not that being able to agree with a negative description of oneself made the description any more enjoyable to hear.

“Did you think I did not approve of Miss Elizabeth?”

Bingley laughed. “You did tell me she was not handsome enough to tempt you, a fact that, Miss Bennet assures me, her sister knows.”

“I may have been wrong about her.”

Bingley laughed again. “Well, I should hope so. One does not wish to find himself married to a lady who is merely tolerable and not tempting.”

“No,” said Darcy, shaking his head. “Miss Bennet. She quite possibly likes you.” He sat in a chair and leaned his head back looking up at the ceiling. “I was wrong about Miss Elizabeth as well. She is quite handsome.” He scrubbed his face. “However, she finds me proud and was surprised that I could be kind.”

“That does not bode well for a marriage,” said Bingley, studying his friend. It was rare to see Darcy so distraught. “So, there was no secret assignation as implied?”

Darcy groaned. “No. I read a book, and Miss Elizabeth read a book. I sat here, and she was across the room. There was nothing worthy of scandal that happened in here tonight.”

“But her aunt saw you together.”

“I was just leaving the room when Mrs. Philips came in in search of Miss Elizabeth. She pushed past me into the room and saw Miss Elizabeth putting on her slippers and smoothing her skirt…as any lady would do after sitting for an extended period of time.” He sighed. “Before I could stop her, she was off calling for Mr. Bennet, as I am sure you and all your guests heard.” He rested an arm across his eyes. “A brief discussion followed between myself and Mr. Bennet and then between Mr. Bennet and Miss Elizabeth.” He drew a deep breath. “She wept at the thought of marrying me, Bingley. She wept.”

Bingley could feel the pain in his friend’s voice. “Do you love her?”

“I did not realize it until this evening, but yes, I believe I do love her.”

“Then show her the man who is my friend. If you displayed him more often, I would not be able to claim so many angels, for they would be tripping over their slippers to be with you.”

Darcy laughed lightly. Bingley always knew how best to distill a complex situation down to something dashed simple. “Are you saying you find me irresistible, Bingley?”

Bingley laughed loudly. “No! No! I am merely suggesting you could be irresistible to women if you would show your true self to them.” He continued laughing. “Of course, you really only need one lady to find you irresistible.”

“Yes, one lady who must marry me, but presently, I fear, does not even like me very much.”

Bingley rose. “You need sleep; though, I doubt you will get much.”

Darcy stood with him. “I believe you are right.” He followed Bingley to the door. “I am to meet tomorrow afternoon with Mr. Bennet to discuss particulars of the marriage agreement. I have asked Miss Elizabeth to take a walk with me, and she has consented. I told her I would bring you with me so that you could keep Miss Bennet company.”

Bingley turned to look at Darcy. “You agree Miss Bennet likes me?”

“I believe you could be right, but my opinion on matters feminine seems to be sadly lacking, so I would put more confidence in your own feelings than in mine.”

“But you believe it is possible?”

“Yes, Bingley, I do.”

“So,” Bingley said as they entered the hall, “I was right, and you, the great counselor and guide, were wrong?”

“Bingley,” Darcy growled, “have a care. I have had a rather trying night.”

“Not as trying as mine is about to be,” Bingley said as he saw his sister Caroline approaching.

“Good night. You will understand if I leave you now,” Darcy said as he nodded to Caroline and took the stairs to his room two at a time before either Bingley could say anything to him.

Her Father’s Choice is on sale for $0.99 for the month of November.
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Old History (Alexander Jakesch)

Alexander Jakesch – Old History (1892)
Ablakok / CC BY-SA (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0) via Wikimedia Commons

When I saw the title of the book I’m going to share from today on my list of books that I have not yet shared as a Story Connections post, this painting leapt to mind.

Why?

Well, as you will see in the excerpt below, there is a lady in tears, a gentleman who is concerned about her, and some old history standing between them. However, there is not dog in my story. 🙂

In Discovering Mr. Darcy, Lady Catherine (a very different Lady Catherine than one might expect, but oh so fun!) wishes to see Darcy follow his heart and marry the lady he loves. However, simple meddling does not produce the correct results since Darcy does his Darcy thing and manages to make things worse when he thinks he’s actually doing what he should.

Therefore, a compromise is arranged. The excerpt below is from that part of the story.

Enjoy!


She had practised as required. Neither Lady Catherine nor Mr. Collins had indicated how long she had to play.  She pulled on the door to the room, but it did not budge.  She pulled harder but without success.

There was yet another door she could try — the one in Miss Darcy’s bedroom. She hurried through the door that adjoined the sitting room and tried Miss Darcy’s door.  It, like all the others, would not budge.  With a resigned sigh, she returned to the piano and sat on the bench but did not touch the keys.  She was trapped — well and truly trapped. There was no way to leave these rooms without someone coming to let her out.

In the other room, Darcy snapped his book closed. He had not heard a door open or close, but she was not playing, so she must have left.  He pulled his bell and then went to the sitting room door and peeked in.  Elizabeth sat at the instrument, her hands covering her face, and her shoulders rising and falling as she cried.  No matter what she had said to him. No matter what she thought of him, he could not allow her to go uncomforted.

“Miss Elizabeth,” he said softly as he approached her, “are you well?”  It was a silly thing to say when a lady was weeping, but what else could he ask?

She rubbed the tears from her cheeks with her hands and shrugged.  “They are all locked.”

He handed her a handkerchief and took the chair next to the piano where he always sat to turn pages for his sister.  “What are all locked?”

“The doors.” Her reply was somewhat muffled by the cloth she was using to dry her face.

“This door?” he asked.

She nodded.  “And the one in Miss Darcy’s room. We are trapped.”

The oddness of the situation settled uneasily around Darcy.  Three doors locked, and no keys to open them?  He knew that the keys for this room and Georgiana’s were kept by the housekeeper and Lady Catherine unless Georgiana was in residence. The fact that the door to this room had not been left unlocked if it was intended to be the room where Elizabeth practiced did not make sense.

“I have rung for my man,” he said. “When he comes, you will be able to escape.”

“From your room?” She blew her nose softly.

“Yes.”

“And if someone sees me exiting your room?  What then?”

He sighed.  “That would be up to you.”  He would marry her, but only if she wished it.  He would not force her. The situation might be able to be covered.

“Me?”

He nodded.

“There would be no option.  We would have to marry.”  The thought did not terrify her as much as she had expected.  Mr. Darcy was a sullen, arrogant man, but surely, he would be kind to his wife.

“Only if you wished it.  I would not force my disagreeable self on you.” There was a touch of bitterness in his tone.

“You would leave me a ruined woman?”

He shook his head. “No, I would never do anything to harm you.  I would see that the story was not spread, and you would be free to choose whomever you wished.”

She tipped her head and looked at him. “Truly?”

His smile was quick and sad.  “Though it would break my heart, yes.”


Both Discovering Mr. Darcy and its sequel, Not an Heiress, are available to read in Kindle Unlimited.

Meet Philip Dobney

Painting of the parish church of St James the Greater, Stirchley, Shropshire, seen from the southeast. Circa 1850. John Holmes Smith, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

I liked sharing a full chapter last in the previous Story Connections post, that I decided to do it again. 🙂 I’m also sharing the full chapter to give you a good understanding of who Philip Dobney, the hero of And Then Love, is — just in case you haven’t already met him. If you have, it’s always fun to revisit an old friend.

Philip, as well as Lucy, in this story are good friends of Fitzwilliam Darcy. They’ve grown up together, so the friendship is of long standing. Philip is the person to whom the living at Kympton fell when Wickham refused it.

The fact that Philip is a parson is why I picked the painting above to share with this post today. I thought it was a pretty little church, even if it is in Shopshire and not Derbyshire. 🙂 I also liked that it includes a graveyard because that is the setting for the excerpt below that sets up why Lucy needs Philip’s help.

Oh, and one more note about the setting of this story. It begins at the time when Wickham is petitioning Darcy to give him that living he refused. Between him and Lucy’s uncle (who is far worse than Wickham), there’s most certainly going to be some trouble in this story.

Enjoy!

Continue reading Meet Philip Dobney

Femme à la lorgnette (Woman with Spyglass) by Henri Nicholas van Gorp

Femme à la lorgnette (unaltered from original Wikimedia Commons post). Henri Nicolas van Gorp, CC BY-SA 3.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Today, I’m not giving you a short excerpt to read. I’m giving you the whole first chapter of Assessing Mr. Darcy. This book is the final entry in my Dash of Darcy and Companions collection, and you can download it today for FREE from Amazon. (Today, August 9, only. It goes back to regular price tomorrow. However, it is also available to read in the Kindle Unlimited program.)

As you will see from the chapter below, Mr. Collins is not Mr. Collins in this story, but rather William Bennet.

I think you’ll also figure out why I decided to pair the above picture with this book, but I have to ask: Do you suppose the lady in the painting is spying on her new and handsome neighbours like Elizabeth is? 🙂

Enjoy!

Continue reading Femme à la lorgnette (Woman with Spyglass) by Henri Nicholas van Gorp