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pursuing it; for the lady was the best judge of the difficulties, and the most solicitous for accommodation
and appearance. But still she had inclination enough for shewing people again how delightfully Mr. Frank
Churchill and Miss Woodhouse danced--for doing that in which she need not blush to compare herself
with Jane Fairfax--and even for simple dancing itself, without any of the wicked aids of vanity--to assist
him first in pacing out the room they were in to see what it could be made to hold--and then in taking the
dimensions of the other parlour, in the hope of discovering, in spite of all that Mr. Weston could say of
their exactly equal size, that it was a little the largest.
His first proposition and request, that the dance begun at Mr. Cole's should be finished there--that
the same party should be collected, and the same musician engaged, met with the readiest acquiescence.
Mr. Weston entered into the idea with thorough enjoyment, and Mrs. Weston most willingly undertook
to play as long as they could wish to dance; and the interesting employment had followed, of reckoning
up exactly who there would be, and portioning out the indispensable division of space to every couple.
"You and Miss Smith, and Miss Fairfax, will be three, and the two Miss Coxes five," had been
repeated many times over. "And there will be the two Gilberts, young Cox, my father, and myself,
besides Mr. Knightley. Yes, that will be quite enough for pleasure. You and Miss Smith, and Miss
Fairfax, will be three, and the two Miss Coxes five; and for five couple there will be plenty of room."
But soon it came to be on one side,
"But will there be good room for five couple?--I really do not think there will."
On another,
"And after all, five couple are not enough to make it worth while to stand up. Five couple are nothing,
when one thinks seriously about it. It will not do to invite five couple. It can be allowable only as the
thought of the moment."
Somebody said that Miss Gilbert was expected at her brother's, and must be invited with the rest.
Somebody else believed Mrs. Gilbert would have danced the other evening, if she had been asked. A
word was put in for a second young Cox; and at last, Mr. Weston naming one family of cousins who
must be included, and another of very old acquaintance who could not be left out, it became a certainty
that the five couple would be at least ten, and a very interesting speculation in what possible manner they
could be disposed of.
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The doors of the two rooms were just opposite each other. "Might not they use both rooms, and
dance across the passage?" It seemed the best scheme; and yet it was not so good but that many of them
wanted a better. Emma said it would be awkward; Mrs. Weston was in distress about the supper; and
Mr. Woodhouse opposed it earnestly, on the score of health. It made him so very unhappy, indeed, that
it could not be persevered in.
"Oh! no," said he; "it would be the extreme of imprudence. I could not bear it for Emma!--Emma is
not strong. She would catch a dreadful cold. So would poor little Harriet. So you would all. Mrs.
Weston, you would be quite laid up; do not let them talk of such a wild thing. Pray do not let them talk of
it. That young man (speaking lower) is very thoughtless. Do not tell his father, but that young man is not
quite the thing. He has been opening the doors very often this evening, and keeping them open very
inconsiderately. He does not think of the draught. I do not mean to set you against him, but indeed he is
not quite the thing!"
Mrs. Weston was sorry for such a charge. She knew the importance of it, and said every thing in her
power to do it away. Every door was now closed, the passage plan given up, and the first scheme of
dancing only in the room they were in resorted to again; and with such good-will on Frank Churchill's
part, that the space which a quarter of an hour before had been deemed barely sufficient for five couple,
was now endeavoured to be made out quite enough for ten.
"We were too magnificent," said he. "We allowed unnecessary room. Ten couple may stand here
very well."
Emma demurred. "It would be a crowd--a sad crowd; and what could be worse than dancing
without space to turn in?" [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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