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Mr. Darcy's Dream: A Novel
by Elizabeth Aston
Paperback : 304 pages
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Introduction
From the author of Mr. Darcy's Daughters, the delightful escapades of the Darcy family continue with an enchanting story set in Pride and Prejudice's beloved estate, Pemberley. When Phoebe, a young niece of Pride and Prejudice's Mr. Darcy, is shattered by an unhappy romance, she retreats to Pemberley and is joined by kind-hearted Louisa Bingley, unmarried after three London seasons. Once the young ladies are situated in the house, several handsome strangers also arrive-all hopeful of winning the girls' hearts. As preparations for the ball which Mr. and Mrs. Darcy are to give at Pemberley gain momentum, mischief and love triangles abound, making life as difficult as possible for anyone connected with the Darcy family. Populated with authentic characters firmly rooted in Jane Austen's mores and stylistic traditions, Mr. Darcy's Dream has an unforgettable combination of romance, societal scandals, friendship, family, and marriage.
Excerpt
Chapter One Phoebe Hawkins was twenty years old, handsome, well-born, and with a fortune of fifty thousand pounds. Here she was, at the start of her second London season, the world at her feet, and yet if there were a more miserable young lady in all of London, she would be surprised. It was mid-morning. Phoebe was standing in her father's study in his London house, a fine building in Aubrey Square, looking across the desk at her father, Sir Giles Hawkins, with a mixture of despair and hatred. Phoebe had been fast asleep, lost in dreams of present and future bliss, when her maid abruptly awakened her, saying that Sir Giles wanted to speak to her at once. And with the quick sensibility of a young woman in love, she knew exactly why her father had summoned her. Mr Stanhope must have called, just as he said her would, to ask for her hand in marriage -“As to my heart, you already have it,” she had told him. Perhaps he was downstairs now, at this very moment, waiting for her. Phoebe shrugged herself into a morning gown with more speed than care, and stood, wild with impatience, while Miniver did up the fastenings and coaxed a brush through her tangled hair. Phoebe did not for a moment expect her father would raise any objection. To be sure, Arthur Stanhope was some ten years older than she was, but that was no kind of an age difference. He was rich, well-bred, and would one day inherit his father's title. So it was with utter disbelief that she heard her father's cold and definite words. “There is no possible way that I would give my consent to your marriage to Mr Stanhope.” Phoebe's heart missed a beat. She had misheard, this couldn't be right. “I don't understand,” she cried. “Mr Stanhope wants to marry me, and I wish to be his wife. How can you refuse your consent?” Sir Giles shook his head. “You and Mr Stanhope are not going to marry. I expressly forbid it. It is nearly a year until you are of age, but I will not give you any hope that at the end of that period you will be able to marry him. He knows that I am not prepared to give my consent, now, or in the future. You may think that when you are one-and-twenty you will be able to marry whom you please. However, should you go against my wishes in this matter, you will forfeit your fortune. I have control of that until you are twenty-five. You may say, Mr Stanhope will take you as you are, without a penny to your name . But he knows that at present he cannot marry you, and I told him that by the time you attain your majority, you will have forgotten him.” “How can this be? When did you speak to him? Has he been to the house this morning? Why did you not call me sooner? Why was I not allowed to see him?” Phoebe put her hand on the corner of her father's desk, feeling quite dizzy. She could not believe that this was happening to her. How could her father, her kind, affectionate father, be speaking to her in this cold and forceful way? “Mr Stanhope called upon me to ask formally for your hand in marriage. I told him, as I am now telling you, that there can be no question of my agreeing to him marrying you. I have asked him not to seek an interview with you, and not to approach you, or talk to you, should you meet at any of the parties and functions which lie ahead. I cannot say that he took it in good part, but he is a man with some sense of honour, and when he considers what I had to say, he will see that I am right.” Phoebe pressed her hands to her ears, wanting to shut out her father's cruel words. Why was he behaving like this? Forget Mr Stanhope, and in the few brief months until her birthday? Impossible! She was in love with him, as he was with her, how could they forget one another? She tried to explain this to her father, but he brushed her words aside. “It is not for you to decide whether you may or may not accept an offer of marriage. While you must have a preference, an engagement is a matter for your family, for their lawyers, and for the family and lawyers of the man to whom you finally become betrothed. That man is not Mr Stanhope.” Phoebe's dismay began to give way to anger. She was a dutiful daughter, and while she was normally on excellent terms with her father, teasing him and joking with him, knowing that he liked her playful ways, she rarely stood up against his authority, mostly because he so rarely exerted it. This was a stranger sitting in front of her, and she could not fathom what had turned him into a man that she had never seen before: stern, forbidding, and refusing to listen to her. His face softened. “Believe me, Phoebe, I do understand something of your feelings. However, in this case you must allow me, as your father and of a man with a great deal more experience of the world, to know better than you do what is possible, and what is right. And, forgive me, but your attachment to Mr Stanhope is of such recent standing that you will accept that any parent would be alarmed by talk of engagement. Am I not right in saying that you were unacquainted with Mr Stanhope previously to your coming to London this time?” “You know that to be the case, for Mr Stanhope has been abroad. He is not a friend of our family, and I could not have met him before this year. “ “Exactly. And by saying that he is not a friend of the family, you bring me to one of my principal objections to the match. You are, I suppose, aware of who his parents are?” Phoebe was irritated by this. Yes, she did know that Mr Stanhope's parents were Lord and Lady Stanhope. What was remarkable about that? Her father seemed to expect an answer so she simply nodded. He continued, “You should also be aware that Lord Stanhope, and indeed Lady Stanhope, are prominent in Whig circles. Now I am not to be suggesting that simply because a man is a member of the opposition, while I am a staunch Conservative, means that any antagonism existing within the Houses of Parliament should be carried into the outside world. Yet there is a grain of truth in the saying, once a Whig always a Whig. And Whiggishness is not simply a matter of how a man votes in the house. It is also a matter of outlook, and going beyond politics, into the realm of morality; public morality and private morality. I do not personally think we will see another Whig government within my lifetime. That does not diminish the power and influence carried by the leading families. They have always worked behind the scenes, and by means of marriages and using family connections have exerted a force beyond what is reasonable.” What had this to do with her and Mr Stanhope? What was all this talk of Whigs? She knew that Lord Stanhope did not share her father's political views, but was that so important? Certainly, her father had always had a dislike of Whigs, as many Tories did. But this was the nineteenth century, they were not living in the Middle Ages. Was he going to try to pretend that the Hawkins family and the Stanhopes were like the Montagues and Capulets in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet? “Fustian!” “No, it is not fustian. You are very young, Phoebe, and do not yet know what makes the world go round. You have had a protected upbringing, I am glad to say, and know no more than is suitable for a well-bred young lady. You will not have heard the scandals and intrigue that follow every member of these Whig circles. They make light of the marriage bond -“ His voice faltered and faded away. He had touched on an unmentionable subject, and his eyes dropped as Phoebe looked straight at him. “I do believe I know something about the loosening of marriage bonds,” she said. They looked at one another for a long minute, the unspoken words clear in both their minds, the knowledge of a time when the marriage bonds of Sir Giles and Lady Hawkins had been stretched to breaking point. The long repressed fury finally spilled out of Phoebe as she heard her father say those words, 'make light of the marriage bond'. “You say that to me! You who caused mama so much unhappiness when you set up that woman as your mistress, how dare you criticise other people?” Sir Giles had risen to his feet, his face thunderous. “That ever I should hear a daughter of mine speak in that way. You sound like a woman brought up in the gutter.” “I sound like a girl who was brought up in a household where her father had a mistress, and her mother -“ “I forbid you to say it,” said Sir Giles. “Feelings are not to be silenced. And you condemn an entire group of people, not quoting any individual circumstances, I find it disgraceful, and uncharitable, and in the circumstances inappropriate.” “It is for me to decide what is and what is not appropriate.” They fell silent. Phoebe's chin was up and she stared at her father with such defiance that he in his turn found it difficult to say anything more. Finally, he banged his fist onto the desk. “Very well, I am sorry it has come to this. You are saying that I have condemned all the Stanhopes, Lord and Lady Stanhope, and therefore by association their son, Mr Stanhope, merely for being Whigs. This is not so. Your Mr Stanhope has to my certain knowledge been conducting a lengthy affair with a woman called Mrs Vereker. You look conscious. You know the lady, an uncommonly beautiful woman, an actress of humble origins who managed to ensnare the late Mr Vereker, and so insinuate herself into society where, by birth, manners, and behaviour she had no place.” “I do not care if Mr Stanhope has had a mistress. He is a military man, a man of more than thirty. I do not expect to be his first love.” “No, and if I were fool enough to let you marry him, you would most certainly not be his last love. The man is a rake, Mrs Vereker is simply the latest in a long line of paramours. I daresay she was at the party last night where you were with Mr Stanhope. When he came this morning, he swore he had fallen in love with you; I do not consider his words worth anything. Were I to give my consent to your marriage, you would go to him as a bride with a substantial fortune. I can only suppose that with high living he finds himself in financial difficulties and so looks for an heiress to wed.” Tears started into Phoebe's eyes, but they were tears of rage, not of weakness. Fighting them back, she looked down at the carpet, where the rich Turkish patterns wavered and blurred before her eyes. “You slander him, you have no justification for what you say.” “I speak nothing but the truth. Ask one of your married cousins about Mr Stanhope's reputation, about Mrs Vereker and the others before her, all at the same time for all I know.” He lowered his voice. “Phoebe, believe me it hurts me immeasurably to distress you in this way, but it is too important a matter for anything less than honesty and clear headedness.' He took a heavy breath, and speaking with apparent difficulty, said, “You referred to an episode in my own past life, an episode of which I am ashamed. I will not speak of it, now or ever. It is not a subject to be discussed with my daughter. However, it is because I wish to spare you the unhappiness I caused your mother, that I refuse to let you marry a man like Mr Stanhope. It is my final word. You can weep and wail, although that is not natural to you, or you may rant and rage at me; it will not alter my resolution one jot. You may write to your mother, to ask her to exert her influence with me, but I tell you that it will all be in vain. I know that your mama will be at one with me on this, and you know me well enough to be sure that once my mind is made up I am implacable.” Phoebe left her father's study in a state of greater anger than she had ever known. Her father had risen from his seat and come round the desk to pat her on the shoulder, and had wanted to embrace her, although she drew away from him. Then he said, unforgivably, in her eyes, “One day you will thank me for this. You will meet another man, a better man, who loves you and whom you will love and with whom you will make a very happy marriage. It is not as though you have not had other admirers, indeed, you know I have had more than one young man approach me to ask consent to pay his addresses. You have laughed and scorned them all and asked me to refuse all your suitors, however eligible some of them were. I can understand how a man of fashion and address such as Mr Stanhope could have caught your fancy, but I assure you fancy is all it is. You could not truly love a man of his character.” The problem was that Phoebe did love Arthur Stanhope, that she had never loved any man before, and that she could see no way that she would ever care for another man as intensely as she did for Mr Stanhope. She had come dancing down the stairs, but it was with feet of lead, and a heart as heavy, that she ascended the stairs to go back up to her room. To her relief, Miniver was not in the room. She did not give way to tears, not throw herself on the bed, nor take up the pretty vase from beside her bed, and dash it to the floor. Instead, she went to the window and looked out over the square, her heart thumping inside her chest like a drum marching men into battle. The weather matched her mood. Lowering grey clouds hung over London, a steady drizzle made the pavements look dark and dirty. The trees in the garden in the centre of the square still had a wintry look to them; spring was late this year. She turned away from the window and went across to her little walnut writing desk. She sat down, took out a sheet of notepaper, dipped a quail into the ink, and began to write. Dear Mr Stanhope. . . She got no further. A letter would not do, how could she say all she had to in a letter? No, she wouldn't write to him, she would go and see him. Once this plan entered her head, she brushed away all thoughts of how improper such an action would be. If anyone saw her going into his house, then her reputation would lie in shred. So much the better, she told herself, as she pulled the bell with vigour, calling out at the same time for Miniver, whom she felt sure would be lurking somewhere in the vicinity. She didn't want to take Miniver into her confidence, and so she simply told her to fetch her pelisse, as she was going out, “Going out where, Miss Phoebe? Shall I ask for the carriage to be brought round? And I'll have to put on my own outdoor clothes, I had no idea of your going out so early, and I've al your jewellery lying soaking - “I am going out alone. Go and fetch me a hackney cab, and don't you dare let my father get wind of what I am about.” “A hackney cab? Go alone in a hackney cab? And where to, may I ask?” “You may not.” “It's more than my place is worth. Sir Giles would scalp me, and then turn me off without a reference. A fine thing that would be!” “Oh, very well, you may come with me. Go and find a cab, and tell it to wait around the corner. Miniver pursed her lips. “It isn't right. Give me ten minutes, and the cab will be there. As she shut the door behind her with a bang discreet enough not to be noticed by other servants, and loud enough to express her disapproval, Phoebe sank down on to the chintz-covered sofa. She closed her eyes, as if by doing so she could shut out the images flitting through her mind. She could remember last night with such startling clarity that the scene might be taking place again there before her eyes. She had been at an informal party, given by her cousin Camilla Wytton. The season was not yet underway, but Phoebe had come early to town with her father, who had parliamentary business to attend to. Her mother was due to come up to London next week. It was just such a party as Phoebe liked best. And her pleasure in the evening was capped by the arrival of Arthur Stanhope. She had been standing beside Mr Portal, and laughing at one of his witty remarks, when she saw Arthur Stanhope standing at the door. Their eyes met, her eyes brimming with merriment, and his amused and alight with pleasure in seeing her. They talked, as they had done ever since they first met, a conversation which, Phoebe felt, could go on for the rest of their lives, and never grow boring. They went down to supper together, and then after supper, Camilla persuaded her sister, Alethea, to play some dances for the company. Oh, that exquisite moment when Mr Stanhope took Phoebe aside and led her into a little alcove, quite deserted, and there he took her into his arms, and in a voice quite unlike his usual calm tones, told her he loved her. His kiss, gentle, then growing more passionate, had wrapped Phoebe in a cloud of velvet delight, and when they drew apart to look into one another eyes, she felt a joy such as she had never experienced. view abbreviated excerpt only...Discussion Questions
1. Discuss the title of the novel. What is Mr. Darcy's dream? What are his wishes for his family and for the Pemberleyestate?
2. “Nothing is constant, nothing can stay the same as it is year in and year out,” according to Louisa (page 145). What
changes are afoot in Mr. Darcy's Dream? Which characters
embrace progress, and which characters resist it? What are
their motivations for change or resistance?
3. Politics come between Phoebe and Stanhope: her Tory
family and his Whig family are at odds. Do you think politics play as great a role in family relations and romance today? Why or why not?
4. Compare Miniver, Phoebe's maid, to Betsy, Louisa's maid.
Who is more outspoken? Who has a better relationship
with the woman she serves? What do these characters add
to the novel?
5. Louisa tells Phoebe, “You are too rigorous in your judgements. You do not give time for people's virtues to grow on you, you are so quick to dismiss them that you never find out their true worth” (page 41). Is Louisa right about Phoebe's quick judgements? Who does Phoebe judg correctly, and who does she misjudge at first? Are her
instincts unreliable?
6. Regarding unfaithful husbands, Phoebe wonders, “Was
this the common lot of wives?” (page 187). How do female
characters address marital infidelity in the novel? How
would you answer Phoebe's question about husbands and
wives?
7. Discussing women with Mr. Drummond, Phoebe says,
“Our world is a smaller one than that of you men” (page
98). Do you think that the world is still a smaller place for women today?
8. Accepting Mr. Drummond's proposal, Louisa says, “Fortune
and estates mean nothing to me. I can imagine no
greater happiness than being your wife” (page 264). Is
Louisa naïve to dismiss money and social standing in her
choice of a husband, or is she likely to find happiness with Mr. Drummond? What challenges might the couple face
in the future?
9. Mr. Stanhope is a gentleman of the city, while Phoebe enjoys activities of the country, especially horseback riding. Where do you think the couple should make their home?
10. If you have read other works by Aston, how does Mr. Darcy's Dream compare to the other books in the series?
Notes From the Author to the Bookclub
I'm often asked why I chose to write sequels to Jane Austen's novels, and why I felt that I could do this given her almost cult status today. The reality is that I'm not writing sequels at all. My books are variations on a theme by Jane Austen - young women of marriageable age going out into the adult world of dangers and delights. Jane Austen and I are from different times. I can't see life through her eyes, nor am I restricted as she was in the subjects I can write about. As a modern historical novelist, I can choose a broader canvas than she was allowed. My books take the characters beyond the confines of country house and village, beyond Bath and Kent, into the fashionable world of London, and even as far afield as Paris and Italy. Mr Darcy's Dream isn't just for those who 'enjoy Austen without reverence', as a reviewer put it. This book, and the other titles in the series, are for anyone who enjoys historical novels, and for those who love romantic comedies. Even if you've never picked up a Jane Austen novel in your life, I hope you'll enjoy one of mine, and, either way, escape from a difficult, tumultuous world into a merrier one, filled with sparkling satire, witty women and handsome heroes.Book Club Recommendations
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