Unexpurgated Austen
by Bill
Kirton
Elizabeth felt a little chill of alarm at his words. Over the past few weeks, the
knowledge she would soon be obliged to impart to him had been a heavy burden.
Only prudence had stilled her tongue for so long.
Elizabeth sighed deeply. The moment had arrived.
Elizabeth gave a little shake of her head.
Elizabeth felt her cheeks begin to burn at this implication that her woeful condition
might have been occasioned by some other dalliance. She stood and confronted
him.
Excellent news coinciding with the recent 200th anniversary of the publication of Pride and Prejudice revealed that hitherto unseen fragments of
alternative narrative departures had been found in the papers of a private
collector in Boston . Perhaps the most startling was one
revealing the author’s original account of the wooing of Elizabeth .
The full text is appended below.
The gentlemen
had joined the ladies and the card-tables had been placed but Darcy, whose
countenance betrayed quite openly the displeasure he would feel at being
compelled to tolerate conversation which he was certain would be superlatively
stupid, made his way into the withdrawing room where he was agreeably surprised
to find Miss Bennet seated at an escritoire.
‘Why, Miss
Bennet, to be sure,’ he said. ‘I wonder that I find you here absorbed in
reclusive meditation at a moment when the company is preparing to initiate the
evening’s entertainments.’
Elizabeth had heard his arrival and, aware of the
fact that his inclination was ever to deliver his sentiments in a manner which
did little to recommend them, was nonetheless reassured to note that his
countenance was less forbidding and disagreeable than was his wont and,
emboldened thereby, she replied ‘But sir, you too are equally guilty of absenting
yourself from the imminent merriment.’
Darcy waved a
dismissive hand and said ‘I am rarely in the requisite humour to give consequence
to those who prefer the tedium of quadrille or cassino to the infinitely more
delicate delights of personal discourse.’ He then paused before adding, ‘I
would suggest, too, that such discourse holds even greater charms if it is of
an amatory nature.’
‘I must
confess,’ she said, ‘that my spirits of late have inclined little towards
post-prandial diversions. I regret to say that there is some tumult in my
mind.’
‘Then you must
unburden yourself, dear lady. Mysteries held in the mind must surely become
injurious encumbrances unless they be shared.’
‘Oh, it is no
mystery. That is too grandiloquent a word. It is a mere discomposure of my
spirits and yet I find that it cannot easily be overcome.’
Her words served
momentarily to discompose Darcy himself.
‘Then, perhaps a
stroll through…’
To his extreme
surprise, Elizabeth raised
her hand and pressed her fingers against his lips to stop his words.
‘Ah, Mr Darcy,’
she said. ‘I beg that you should not ask that I walk again with you in the
garden for our exertions of yesterday evening have quite wearied me.’
She withdrew her
hand and a silence grew between them until, disconcerted by its prolongation,
Darcy felt obliged to break it.
‘In truth,’ he
said, ‘I must confess to some fatigue myself. And yet I own that I much prefer
those after-dinner pastimes to retiring for whist at your Aunt’s table.’
‘Oh indeed,
indeed, Mr Darcy,’ Elizabeth hastened
to reassure him before her voice became almost a whisper and she added ‘But I
fear that their consequences may be other than those you have led me to
anticipate.’
‘Why, my dear
Miss Bennet, whatever is it that ails you?’
‘Alas, I know
not,’ she said, ‘save that of late I have experienced much difficulty in
tolerating breakfast and have oft had occasion to withdraw to the closet beyond
the withdrawing room, there to disgorge in a most helpless and piteous manner
all that I have partaken of at table.’
The dreadful
silence returned as Darcy absorbed the import of her declaration. At last, he
had composed himself sufficiently to reply, in broken, barely articulate
utterances.
‘Oh my goodness!
My dear Miss Bennet. How disconcerting. I never heard any thing so abominable.’
‘I am
exceedingly gratified by your concern,’ said Elizabeth . ‘It is indeed
a most disagreeable pursuit, and, moreover, the unpleasantness is exacerbated
to almost intolerable proportions by a wholly incomprehensible deterioration in
the efficacity of the lumbar regions of my anatomical dispositions so that
forbearance from the audible bemoaning of my ill fortune is not easy of
maintenance.’
Darcy nodded,
then asked ‘What?’
‘I get
backache,’ said Elizabeth .
Darcy,
apparently lost in thought, raised his hand to his face and drew his fingers
down the line of his left cheek. At last his countenance cleared and the ghost
of a smile formed at the corners of his lips.
‘Is it then
perhaps that the moon has run to its last quarter and that that affliction by
which all young ladies are with such tiresome regularity beset is upon you?’
‘I think not, Mr
Darcy. For it is now some thirteen weeks since I last suffered that indignity.’
Having at last
begun to ease the burden she had been carrying, Elizabeth felt a lightness permeate her being. It seemed
to her only just that the weight of this specific knowledge should be
distributed between those responsible for its inception. Darcy, however,
appeared to be resistant to its import.
‘Thirteen
weeks?’ he cried. ‘But this can only signify gestation and work for the
apothecary.’
‘I fear your
observations may be only too pertinent.’
Darcy walked
slowly across to the window and looked out over the lawns.
‘I am
nonetheless perplexed,’ he began, without turning to look at her, ‘as to how
such a situation could have come to pass, for I have, each evening, without
fail, made use of that cylindrical configuration of finely-wrought India-rubber
which is intended to be the receptacle for the consequences of such pastimes.’
‘Mr Darcy, I
have been graced by no visitors from the Lord and awakened by no angelic
Gabriels. There is precious little of the immaculate about this conception. I thought
you a man of honour. I hope I was not mistaken.’
Darcy looked at
her frowning face, felt the fire in her eyes, and sensed the power which filled
her impassioned frame. He also recalled those moments they had spent in the
garden which had led to the present discomforting situation and began to opine
that betrothal and subsequent marriage would make available to him after-dinner
pursuits far preferable to tuneless songs, piano recitals during which notes
were struck in apparently random sequences, and the repetitive flutter of
playing cards across baize. He took her hands in his.
‘My dear Elizabeth ,’
he said. ‘It is a cliché acknowledged by many that a single man in possession
of a good fortune and an estate in Derbyshire must be in want of an heir. Much
as I loathe the aphorisms engendered by such convoluted elucubrations, I
confess that I find such a fancy reasonable, sensible and not entirely unattractive. Shall we
perambulate in the gardens to discuss our future?’
‘Cool,’ said Elizabeth .
Comments
My comment is I HATE JANE AUSTEN AND I'M GLAD THAT ELIZABETH IS PREGNANT. SHE'S A TROLLOP (not a Trollope)
For 3 years when teaching A level English we used to trade texts and I always tried to avoid Jane Austen. I taught any weird and wonderful thing to avoid teaching Austen. But one year I got caught out and HAD to teach Mansfield Park. I confess I will admit that Austen writes well - it's just I've no interest in the world she writes about. Which is fine. I hear she's not a great fan of mine either. All down to taste eh? (Like Chris and me have got it and...) dons hard hat and retires from the forum...
and while we're all in confessional mode - i've tried three times to read wuthering heights, and failed. where i come from, nelly dean is someone we used to fantasise about in the old mill by the stream.
brilliant piece, bill. consider it as part of a modern version, and you might just end up very rich. the best thing about janey, is perhaps that she's out of copyright! i want more.
Mr Kirton doth not disappoint.
Cool, indeed.
Will there be any more?
Anne