~Amy
Sat, Dec 7, 1996 (16:35)
seed
Ann2 made this sketch to help some of us who had become confused by discontinuity in screen direction in the various Netherfield scenes. HC fixed it up a little.
~Amy
Sat, Dec 7, 1996 (16:36)
#1
But, Ann2, I am having trouble finding your narrative. Do you still have a copy?
~jwinsor
Sun, Dec 8, 1996 (00:26)
#2
(((Pardon me, Amy, but should 79:1 not have been placed in topic 78?)))
~Anna
Sun, Dec 8, 1996 (04:21)
#3
how disappointing - on a rapid read I thought this topic was going to tell me how to avoid disorientation in the Pemberly drawing room.
Thats the real trick...
in confusion
A
~Ann2
Wed, Dec 11, 1996 (00:57)
#4
Re 79:1
Comments on sketch of Netherfield drawing room:
Five scenes inP&P2 take place here. The walls and the tablecloth are yellow. The windows seems to be covered in the evening. And piedestals with chandeliers of prodigious dimensions are placed in front of them and in the corners.
1) After the Meryton assembly.
There is coffea on the round table and Miss Bingley moves with her cup to Mrs Hurst on the sofa exclaiming :�And so none of the Hertfordshire ladies ...� Bingley is in the big armchair near the sofa and Darcy is standing at the fireplace. Mr Hurst is snoring on couch (He had to sleep a lot after all the food and wine he devouted his life to.Here his position of the white whale is repelling. He was probably able to sleep in chairs too, as his wife might have daily proof, and we saw at Pemberley, where his
osition is as if in a chair.) Bingley rises to ask Darcy why he is determined to think ill of everybody. And the latter feeds the malice of the evil sisters with his :-� sooner call her mother a wit�. (Rather boyish look on his face there.)
2) The card evening.
Darcy enters through Door A, walks up to Lizzy asking about Jane, then withdraws to �his table�. Lizzy is on the sofa. Around the table are : Caroline Bingley chair A ; Mrs Hurst chair B ; Mr Bingley chair
C ; Mr Hurst chair D. Thus the couch is empty as we get a glimpse of it rigth in front of Darcy as he enters.
3) Mrs Bennet�s visit.
Caroline closes door C and proceeds to the sofa lamenting of �the invasion�. Mrs Bennet enters through Door C , advances to the middle of the room, then goes to a window (nr 2). After that she returns to the armchair near the sofa and sits down. Kitty and Lydia remain standing behind that chair until Lydia steps forward to ask Bingley about his Ball plans. Mr Hurst who stands by the fireplace at first, manages to escape through door C.
Mr Darcy is seated near his table reading, but rises as the visitors enter ; then he moves forward until appalled by the beneathness of his company, (with some exceptions..) he resumes his familiar position by a window (nr 1). Mr Bingley starts in the armchair near the sofa , rises with Darcy and stands in the middle of the room. Lizzy enters with her mother and sisters. Then she moves in the middle like Bingley, rather symbolically(?) as they are the links between Darcy and the rest. Lizzy seemingly
rying to prevent her mother�s rudeness from reaching its object even with her body.
4) A turn about the room.
Mr Darcy is in his chair reading and Miss Elizabeth Bennet is at the round table on chair C reading too(improving their minds no doubt). Mrs Hurst is sitting in the armchair near the sofa yawning and looking boored. Mr Hurst is asleep on the couch (what else when there was neither food nor cards to be had...). Mr Bingley stands leaning on the mantelpiece but soon goes to sit on the sofa looking rather absentminded.
Miss Bingley walks about the room pretending to read volume two of the book Darcy has chosen. But soon she throws her book aside (on the lower cupboard beside the fire) and after some bending and stretching, - rather obvious wouldn�t you say ? - asks Miss Eliza to join her and take a turn, which Lizzy does out of sheer politeness I guess. After Darcy�s comment on their figures, she stand by the fire to �tease - and if possible - laugh at him�. Miss Bingley stands a bit aside and (as she observes the reac
ion Lizzy is able to get from Darcy, oh how different from what she herself has ever managed...) finally hurries to the pianoforte for �some music�.
(Error I have not been patient enough to correct: Mr Hurst�s couch should be nearer to the window wall, almost in front of door A.)
5) I have recently observed, that even the eventful Netherfield Ball supper takes place in this room, though some rearrangements of the furniture are made. Tables put in and Mr Hurst�s couch probably placed somewhere else (where he could rest his weary body after the many dances he no doubt indulged in). The pianoforte, as we all know, is available for the various performances of Mary Bennet and Louisa Hurst.
At the pauseknob Ann2.
Found this on a floppy disc this morning. Must remember to list the contents
as the floppies pile up around me...
~Amy
Tue, Dec 24, 1996 (00:41)
#5
I am so sorry, but I have been given more drawings. Oh dear, it was weeks ago, someone sent computer sketches of the Netfield and Pemberly drawing rooms. I did not put them up right away because I did not want to steal Ann2's thunder, since she spent a lot of effort learning how to convert the picture she made.
But now, I can't remember who send the sketches we haven't seen and I can't find the email either. Anne from South Africa, maybe? Please forgive me.