[Dorothy Vernon of Haddon Hall by Charles Major]@TWC D-Link bookDorothy Vernon of Haddon Hall CHAPTER XVI 3/14
It came to her with her father's half-command regarding Leicester. Winter had again asserted itself.
The weather was bitter cold and snow covered the ground to the depth of a horse's fetlock. The eventful night of the grand ball arrived, and Dorothy's heart throbbed till she thought surely it would burst. At nightfall guests began to arrive, and Sir George, hospitable soul that he was, grew boisterous with good humor and delight. The rare old battlements of Haddon were ablaze with flambeaux, and inside the rooms were alight with waxen tapers.
The long gallery was brilliant with the smiles of bejewelled beauty, and laughter, song, and merriment filled the grand old Hall from terrace to Entrance Tower.
Dorothy, of course, was brought down from her prison to grace the occasion with a beauty which none could rival.
Her garments were of soft, clinging, bright-colored silks and snowy laces, and all who saw her agreed that a creature more radiant never greeted the eye of man. When the guests had all arrived, the pipers in the balcony burst forth in heart-swelling strains of music, and every foot in the room longed for the dance to begin. I should like to tell you how Elizabeth most graciously opened the ball with his Majesty, the King of the Peak, amid the plaudits of worshipping subjects, and I should enjoy describing the riotous glory which followed,--for although I was not there, I know intimately all that happened,--but I will balk my desire and tell you only of those things which touched Dorothy. Leicester, of course, danced with her, and during a pause in the figure, the girl in response to pleadings which she had adroitly incited, reluctantly promised to grant the earl the private interview he so much desired if he could suggest some means for bringing it about.
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