Twirl at the Bath Assembly Rooms
BhavaniBhavani/Guest Contributor/SIGHTSEEING, BATH/ Updated : Nov 23, 2015, 13:32 IST
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Synopsis
The Assembly Rooms are a symbol of all the romance that this period offered—the painful wait for the gentleman to ask for your hand for the dance, then standing facing each other before the dance, and later hoping that he would as … Read more
The Assembly Rooms are a symbol of all the romance that this period offered—the painful wait for the gentleman to ask for your hand for the dance, then standing facing each other before the dance, and later hoping that he would ask your father for your hand in marriage. Read less

The Assembly Rooms are a symbol of all the romance that this period offered—the painful wait for the gentleman to ask for your hand for the dance, then standing facing each other before the dance, and later hoping that he would ask your father for your hand in marriage. As Ms. Bingley says in Pride and Prejudice, “a lady's imagination is very rapid; it jumps from admiration to love, from love to matrimony in a moment.” Jane Austen herself frequented these Assembly Rooms when she lived here. As she said, “to be fond of dancing was a certain step towards falling in love.” And dancing played a pivotal role in her novels in depicting the society of those times and furthering the romance of her characters. These Assembly Rooms were opened in the late 18th century and were the pulse of entertainment in Bath.
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