7 [ p.4 ]

very becoming in so young a Man, but I amsure I had no claim to expect it; for I neverexceptsaw him before in my Life. — By the bye,he enquired after one of my Daughters, butI do not know which. I suppose you knowamong yourselves."


On the 3d . day after the Ball, as Nannyat fiveminutes before three, the dinner hour at Stanton, was beginning to bustle into the parlour withthe Tray & the Knife-case, she was suddenlytwo gentlemen oncalled toHorseback the front door, by the sound of assmart a rap as the end of a riding-whip cd .could[..]give1 — & tho’though charged by pause of curiosity onafter a short exercise of wonder &the part Miſs. W.Watson to let nobody in, re:Curiosity of the Miſs Watsons, they were:turned in half a minute, with a look of awkward dismay, to hold the parlour door open for Ld .Lord Osborne& Tom Musgrave. — The Surprise of the youngLadies may be imagined. No visitors wouldhave been welcome at sucha moment; butsuch visitors as these —were such a one as Ld .Lord Osborneat least, a nobleman & a stranger, wasreally distreſsing. — He looked a little embar::raſsed himself, — as, onafter being introduced byhis

Footnotes

1.
'g' of 'give' written over 1-2 erased illegible letters.Back to context...
Image for page: b7-4 of manuscript: qmwats