Her uncle and both her aunts were
in the drawing-room when Fanny went down. To
the former she was an interesting object, and he saw
with pleasure the general elegance of her appearance,
and her being in remarkably good looks. The neatness
and propriety of her dress was all that he would allow
himself to commend in her presence, but upon her leaving
the room again soon afterwards, he spoke of her beauty
with very decided praise.
“Yes,” said Lady Bertram,
“she looks very well. I sent Chapman to
her.”
“Look well! Oh, yes!”
cried Mrs. Norris, “she has good reason to look
well with all her advantages: brought up in this
family as she has been, with all the benefit of her
cousins’ manners before her. Only think,
my dear Sir Thomas, what extraordinary advantages
you and I have been the means of giving her.
The very gown you have been taking notice of is your
own generous present to her when dear Mrs. Rushworth
married. What would she have been if we had not
taken her by the hand?”
Sir Thomas said no more; but when
they sat down to table the eyes of the two young men
assured him that the subject might be gently touched
again, when the ladies withdrew, with more success.
Fanny saw that she was approved; and the consciousness
of looking well made her look still better.
From a variety of causes she was happy, and she was
soon made still happier; for in following her aunts
out of the room, Edmund, who was holding open the door,
said, as she passed him, “You must dance with
me, Fanny; you must keep two dances for me; any two
that you like, except the first.” She
had nothing more to wish for. She had hardly
ever been in a state so nearly approaching high spirits
in her life. Her cousins’ former gaiety
on the day of a ball was no longer surprising to her;
she felt it to be indeed very charming, and was actually
practising her steps about the drawing-room as long
as she could be safe from the notice of her aunt Norris,
who was entirely taken up at first in fresh arranging
and injuring the noble fire which the butler had prepared.
Half an hour followed that would have
been at least languid under any other circumstances,
but Fanny’s happiness still prevailed.
It was but to think of her conversation with Edmund,
and what was the restlessness of Mrs. Norris?
What were the yawns of Lady Bertram?
The gentlemen joined them; and soon
after began the sweet expectation of a carriage, when
a general spirit of ease and enjoyment seemed diffused,
and they all stood about and talked and laughed, and
every moment had its pleasure and its hope.
Fanny felt that there must be a struggle in Edmund’s
cheerfulness, but it was delightful to see the effort
so successfully made.
When the carriages were really heard,
when the guests began really to assemble, her own
gaiety of heart was much subdued: the sight of
so many strangers threw her back into herself; and
besides the gravity and formality of the first great
circle, which the manners of neither Sir Thomas nor
Lady Bertram were of a kind to do away, she found
herself occasionally called on to endure something
worse. She was introduced here and there by
her uncle, and forced to be spoken to, and to curtsey,
and speak again. This was a hard duty, and she
was never summoned to it without looking at William,
as he walked about at his ease in the background of
the scene, and longing to be with him.
The entrance of the Grants and Crawfords
was a favourable epoch. The stiffness of the
meeting soon gave way before their popular manners
and more diffused intimacies: little groups
were formed, and everybody grew comfortable.
Fanny felt the advantage; and, drawing back from the
toils of civility, would have been again most happy,
could she have kept her eyes from wandering between
Edmund and Mary Crawford. She looked all loveliness—and
what might not be the end of it? Her own musings
were brought to an end on perceiving Mr. Crawford
before her, and her thoughts were put into another
channel by his engaging her almost instantly for the
first two dances. Her happiness on this occasion
was very much a la mortal, finely
chequered. To be secure of a partner at first
was a most essential good— for the moment
of beginning was now growing seriously near; and she
so little understood her own claims as to think that
if Mr. Crawford had not asked her, she must have been
the last to be sought after, and should have received
a partner only through a series of inquiry, and bustle,
and interference, which would have been terrible; but
at the same time there was a pointedness in his manner
of asking her which she did not like, and she saw
his eye glancing for a moment at her necklace, with
a smile—she thought there was a smile—which
made her blush and feel wretched. And though
there was no second glance to disturb her, though
his object seemed then to be only quietly agreeable,
she could not get the better of her embarrassment,
heightened as it was by the idea of his perceiving
it, and had no composure till he turned away to some
one else. Then she could gradually rise up to
the genuine satisfaction of having a partner, a voluntary
partner, secured against the dancing began.
When the company were moving into
the ballroom, she found herself for the first time
near Miss Crawford, whose eyes and smiles were immediately
and more unequivocally directed as her brother’s
had been, and who was beginning to speak on the subject,
when Fanny, anxious to get the story over, hastened
to give the explanation of the second necklace:
the real chain. Miss Crawford listened; and all
her intended compliments and insinuations to Fanny
were forgotten: she felt only one thing; and
her eyes, bright as they had been before, shewing
they could yet be brighter, she exclaimed with eager
pleasure, “Did he? Did Edmund? That
was like himself. No other man would have thought
of it. I honour him beyond expression.”
And she looked around as if longing to tell him so.
He was not near, he was attending a party of ladies
out of the room; and Mrs. Grant coming up to the two
girls, and taking an arm of each, they followed with
the rest.
Fanny’s heart sunk, but there
was no leisure for thinking long even of Miss Crawford’s
feelings. They were in the ballroom, the violins
were playing, and her mind was in a flutter that forbade
its fixing on anything serious. She must watch
the general arrangements, and see how everything was
done.
In a few minutes Sir Thomas came to
her, and asked if she were engaged; and the “Yes,
sir; to Mr. Crawford,” was exactly what he had
intended to hear. Mr. Crawford was not far off;
Sir Thomas brought him to her, saying something which
discovered to Fanny, that she was to lead the
way and open the ball; an idea that had never occurred
to her before. Whenever she had thought of the
minutiae of the evening, it had been as a matter of
course that Edmund would begin with Miss Crawford;
and the impression was so strong, that though her
uncle spoke the contrary, she could not help
an exclamation of surprise, a hint of her unfitness,
an entreaty even to be excused. To be urging
her opinion against Sir Thomas’s was a proof
of the extremity of the case; but such was her horror
at the first suggestion, that she could actually look
him in the face and say that she hoped it might be
settled otherwise; in vain, however: Sir Thomas
smiled, tried to encourage her, and then looked too
serious, and said too decidedly, “It must be
so, my dear,” for her to hazard another word;
and she found herself the next moment conducted by
Mr. Crawford to the top of the room, and standing
there to be joined by the rest of the dancers, couple
after couple, as they were formed.
She could hardly believe it.
To be placed above so many elegant young women!
The distinction was too great. It was treating
her like her cousins! And her thoughts flew
to those absent cousins with most unfeigned and truly
tender regret, that they were not at home to take their
own place in the room, and have their share of a pleasure
which would have been so very delightful to them.
So often as she had heard them wish for a ball at home
as the greatest of all felicities! And to have
them away when it was given—and for her
to be opening the ball— and with Mr. Crawford
too! She hoped they would not envy her that
distinction now; but when she looked back to
the state of things in the autumn, to what they had
all been to each other when once dancing in that house
before, the present arrangement was almost more than
she could understand herself.
The ball began. It was rather
honour than happiness to Fanny, for the first dance
at least: her partner was in excellent spirits,
and tried to impart them to her; but she was a great
deal too much frightened to have any enjoyment till
she could suppose herself no longer looked at.
Young, pretty, and gentle, however, she had no awkwardnesses
that were not as good as graces, and there were few
persons present that were not disposed to praise her.
She was attractive, she was modest, she was Sir Thomas’s
niece, and she was soon said to be admired by Mr.
Crawford. It was enough to give her general
favour. Sir Thomas himself was watching her
progress down the dance with much complacency; he
was proud of his niece; and without attributing all
her personal beauty, as Mrs. Norris seemed to do,
to her transplantation to Mansfield, he was pleased
with himself for having supplied everything else:
education and manners she owed to him.
Miss Crawford saw much of Sir Thomas’s
thoughts as he stood, and having, in spite of all
his wrongs towards her, a general prevailing desire
of recommending herself to him, took an opportunity
of stepping aside to say something agreeable of Fanny.
Her praise was warm, and he received it as she could
wish, joining in it as far as discretion, and politeness,
and slowness of speech would allow, and certainly
appearing to greater advantage on the subject than
his lady did soon afterwards, when Mary, perceiving
her on a sofa very near, turned round before she began
to dance, to compliment her on Miss Price’s
looks.
“Yes, she does look very well,”
was Lady Bertram’s placid reply. “Chapman
helped her to dress. I sent Chapman to her.”
Not but that she was really pleased to have Fanny admired;
but she was so much more struck with her own kindness
in sending Chapman to her, that she could not get it
out of her head.
Miss Crawford knew Mrs. Norris too
well to think of gratifying her by commendation
of Fanny; to her, it was as the occasion offered—“Ah!
ma’am, how much we want dear Mrs. Rushworth
and Julia to-night!” and Mrs. Norris paid her
with as many smiles and courteous words as she had
time for, amid so much occupation as she found for
herself in making up card-tables, giving hints to
Sir Thomas, and trying to move all the chaperons to
a better part of the room.
Miss Crawford blundered most towards
Fanny herself in her intentions to please. She
meant to be giving her little heart a happy flutter,
and filling her with sensations of delightful self-consequence;
and, misinterpreting Fanny’s blushes, still
thought she must be doing so when she went to her
after the two first dances, and said, with a significant
look, “Perhaps you can tell me why my
brother goes to town to-morrow? He says he has
business there, but will not tell me what. The
first time he ever denied me his confidence!
But this is what we all come to. All are supplanted
sooner or later. Now, I must apply to you for
information. Pray, what is Henry going for?”
Fanny protested her ignorance as steadily
as her embarrassment allowed.
“Well, then,” replied
Miss Crawford, laughing, “I must suppose it
to be purely for the pleasure of conveying your brother,
and of talking of you by the way.”
Fanny was confused, but it was the
confusion of discontent; while Miss Crawford wondered
she did not smile, and thought her over-anxious, or
thought her odd, or thought her anything rather than
insensible of pleasure in Henry’s attentions.
Fanny had a good deal of enjoyment in the course of
the evening; but Henry’s attentions had very
little to do with it. She would much rather not
have been asked by him again so very soon, and she
wished she had not been obliged to suspect that his
previous inquiries of Mrs. Norris, about the supper
hour, were all for the sake of securing her at that
part of the evening. But it was not to be avoided:
he made her feel that she was the object of all; though
she could not say that it was unpleasantly done, that
there was indelicacy or ostentation in his manner;
and sometimes, when he talked of William, he was really
not unagreeable, and shewed even a warmth of heart
which did him credit. But still his attentions
made no part of her satisfaction. She was happy
whenever she looked at William, and saw how perfectly
he was enjoying himself, in every five minutes that
she could walk about with him and hear his account
of his partners; she was happy in knowing herself admired;
and she was happy in having the two dances with Edmund
still to look forward to, during the greatest part
of the evening, her hand being so eagerly sought after
that her indefinite engagement with him was
in continual perspective. She was happy even
when they did take place; but not from any flow of
spirits on his side, or any such expressions of tender
gallantry as had blessed the morning. His mind
was fagged, and her happiness sprung from being the
friend with whom it could find repose. “I
am worn out with civility,” said he. “I
have been talking incessantly all night, and with
nothing to say. But with you, Fanny, there
may be peace. You will not want to be talked
to. Let us have the luxury of silence.”
Fanny would hardly even speak her agreement.
A weariness, arising probably, in great measure, from
the same feelings which he had acknowledged in the
morning, was peculiarly to be respected, and they
went down their two dances together with such sober
tranquillity as might satisfy any looker-on that Sir
Thomas had been bringing up no wife for his younger
son.
The evening had afforded Edmund little
pleasure. Miss Crawford had been in gay spirits
when they first danced together, but it was not her
gaiety that could do him good: it rather sank
than raised his comfort; and afterwards, for he found
himself still impelled to seek her again, she had
absolutely pained him by her manner of speaking of
the profession to which he was now on the point of
belonging. They had talked, and they had been
silent; he had reasoned, she had ridiculed; and they
had parted at last with mutual vexation. Fanny,
not able to refrain entirely from observing them,
had seen enough to be tolerably satisfied. It
was barbarous to be happy when Edmund was suffering.
Yet some happiness must and would arise from the very
conviction that he did suffer.
When her two dances with him were
over, her inclination and strength for more were pretty
well at an end; and Sir Thomas, having seen her walk
rather than dance down the shortening set, breathless,
and with her hand at her side, gave his orders for
her sitting down entirely. From that time Mr.
Crawford sat down likewise.
“Poor Fanny!” cried William,
coming for a moment to visit her, and working away
his partner’s fan as if for life, “how
soon she is knocked up! Why, the sport is but
just begun. I hope we shall keep it up these
two hours. How can you be tired so soon?”
“So soon! my good friend,”
said Sir Thomas, producing his watch with all necessary
caution; “it is three o’clock, and your
sister is not used to these sort of hours.”
“Well, then, Fanny, you shall
not get up to-morrow before I go. Sleep as long
as you can, and never mind me.”
“Oh! William.”
“What! Did she think of being up before
you set off?”
“Oh! yes, sir,” cried
Fanny, rising eagerly from her seat to be nearer her
uncle; “I must get up and breakfast with him.
It will be the last time, you know; the last morning.”
“You had better not. He
is to have breakfasted and be gone by half-past nine.
Mr. Crawford, I think you call for him at half-past
nine?”
Fanny was too urgent, however, and
had too many tears in her eyes for denial; and it
ended in a gracious “Well, well!” which
was permission.
“Yes, half-past nine,”
said Crawford to William as the latter was leaving
them, “and I shall be punctual, for there will
be no kind sister to get up for me.”
And in a lower tone to Fanny, “I shall have only
a desolate house to hurry from. Your brother
will find my ideas of time and his own very different
to-morrow.”
After a short consideration, Sir Thomas
asked Crawford to join the early breakfast party in
that house instead of eating alone: he should
himself be of it; and the readiness with which his
invitation was accepted convinced him that the suspicions
whence, he must confess to himself, this very ball
had in great measure sprung, were well founded.
Mr. Crawford was in love with Fanny. He had
a pleasing anticipation of what would be. His
niece, meanwhile, did not thank him for what he had
just done. She had hoped to have William all
to herself the last morning. It would have been
an unspeakable indulgence. But though her wishes
were overthrown, there was no spirit of murmuring
within her. On the contrary, she was so totally
unused to have her pleasure consulted, or to have
anything take place at all in the way she could desire,
that she was more disposed to wonder and rejoice in
having carried her point so far, than to repine at
the counteraction which followed.
Shortly afterward, Sir Thomas was
again interfering a little with her inclination, by
advising her to go immediately to bed. “Advise”
was his word, but it was the advice of absolute power,
and she had only to rise, and, with Mr. Crawford’s
very cordial adieus, pass quietly away; stopping at
the entrance-door, like the Lady of Branxholm Hall,
“one moment and no more,” to view the
happy scene, and take a last look at the five or six
determined couple who were still hard at work; and
then, creeping slowly up the principal staircase,
pursued by the ceaseless country-dance, feverish with
hopes and fears, soup and negus, sore-footed and fatigued,
restless and agitated, yet feeling, in spite of everything,
that a ball was indeed delightful.
In thus sending her away, Sir Thomas
perhaps might not be thinking merely of her health.
It might occur to him that Mr. Crawford had been
sitting by her long enough, or he might mean to recommend
her as a wife by shewing her persuadableness.