When Mr. Darcy's daughter Delilah falls unwell Elizabeth Bennet is by her side. This is a sweet variation of Pride and Prejudice. Darcy's Proposal eBook Classic romance British romance Historical romance Regency romance
Writers Should Have a Command of the Language in Which They Write
Let me save you the frustration of reading this unintelligible, but innovative story. Darcy is a widowed father whose daughter takes a liking to Lizzy. They go for a ride and pick flowers near Netherfield which convinces Darcy that Elizabeth would make a wonderful governess or mother. He invites her to spend the summer at Pemberly and with trepidation, Elizabeth accepts. While there Darcy springs the offer of governess on her. She refuses. Then he offers a marriage of convenience. Again she refuses. Delilah, the daughter, becomes so sick the doctors expect her to die, almost breaking her father. Both Elizabeth and Darcy stay by her bedside during the protracted illness growing in their feelings for each other. Finally, Delilah recovers and Darcy admits he wants to marry Elizabeth, not because he wants a governess or even a mother for his daughter, but because he loves her. She accepts. The end.
This is a coherent version of this story, if you want the longer, incoherent version, go ahead and read it. Don't say you weren't warned!
how did I download this? I was rushing to go out of town and downloaded several books, this one was clearly a mistake. The title alone should have prevented me from reading it. Unfortunately, I read everything else I downloaded and wasted 15 minutes of my precious time.
This short read was ok. Story line was good but did not go into depth and time passed way too quickly. Wish it was longer left me with a lot of questions about the characters.
This story was very disappointing. It was completely under-developed. I felt I was reading something my second grade student was trying to develop but needed help. Terrible story. How did it ever get published.
This was a good story, but the wrong grammer or typos or whatever they are distracted from it. I love P P& P, but I never pictured Elizabeth as a giggler.