Page 8 (1/1)
"Ho!" said the Major, in a tone of banter, while Harriet indulged in a suppressed giggle "You let Aura dance with a stranger! Where was your circumspection, Mrs Betty?" Aurelia coloured to the roots of her hair and faltered, "It was Lady Herries who presented him"
"Yes, the child is not to blae of Mrs Churchill while I went to washthe cohich these fine folk seeer"
"That's the ith Chloe and Phyllida in Arcadia," said her father
"But not here," said Betty "In the house, I was detained a little while, for the housekeeper wanted rease spots"
"A little while, sister?" said Harriet "It was through the dancing of three un"
"I was too busy to heed the time," said Betty, "for I obtained the recipe for those delicious almond-cakes, and showed Mrs Waldron the Viennacoffee When I ca down the entleman in a scarlet coat Poor little Robert Roas too bashful to find a partner, though he longed to dance; so I made another couple with him, and thus missed further speech, save that as we took our leave, both Sir George and the Dean complimented me, and said what there is no occasion to repeat just now, sir, when I ought to be fetching your supper"
"Ha! Is it too flattering for little Aura?" asked her father "Come, never spare She will hear worse than that in her day, I'll warrant"
"It was merely," said Betty, reluctantly, "that the Dean called her the star of the evening, and declared that her dancing equalled her face"
"Well said of his reverence! And his honour the baronet, what said he?"
"He said, sir, that so comely and debonnaire a couple had not been seen in these parts since you came home from Flanders and led off the assize ball with Mistress Urania Delavie"
"There, Aura, 'tishis face behind Betty's fan "But all this ti spark"
"That I cannot tell, sir," returned Betty "We were sent hohters, who talked so incessantly that we could not open our lips Who was he, Aura?"