I think it's when Kitty and Lydia are allowed to run wild, flirting with all the officers because girls didn't normally behave like that. Also Mrs Bennet is very embarrassing in her stupidity and bluntness in conversation.
Elizabeth and Mr. Darcy dance to a minuet in the novel Pride and Prejudice.
Mr. Bingley dances with Jane Bennet twice during the ball in chapter 3 of "Pride and Prejudice".
The Meryton ball in Pride and Prejudice is in Chapter 3. At the ball, Mr. Bingley and Mr. Darcy make their first appearance and attract the attention of the locals, including the Bennet sisters.
Actually there are two balls, one is the Assembly, which is a public event, in Chapter 3. The other is the Netherfield ball, which is in Chapter 18.
Lots of people walk to Meryton in Pride and Prejudice.. Mainly though, it is Lydia and Kitty, who go and see the soldiers often.
At the town's ball, when he arrives with Bingley's party.
Jane meets Bingley's sisters in Chapter III.
In "Pride and Prejudice," the arrival of Mr. Bingley in Netherfield is one of the first major events, which sets the story in motion. This is followed by the Meryton ball where Mr. Darcy and Elizabeth Bennet first meet and form their initial perceptions of each other.
Some major scenes in volume 2 of Pride and Prejudice include Mr. Collins proposing to Elizabeth, the Netherfield ball where Mr. Darcy and Elizabeth dance, and the confrontation between Lady Catherine de Bourgh and Elizabeth at Rosings Park. These scenes further develop the relationships and conflicts between the characters in the novel.
Wickham's excuse was initially that he had to go to town on business, and then he says he did not go to the ball because, in his words, "I had better not meet Mr. Darcy; that to be in the same room, the same party with him for so many hours together, might be more than I could bear, and that scenes might arise unpleasant to more than myself."
At the Netherfield ball in Jane Austen's "Pride and Prejudice," Mr. Darcy refuses to dance with Elizabeth Bennet, which sparks tension between them. Elizabeth also overhears Mr. Darcy making derogatory remarks about her, causing her to develop a negative opinion of him.
In the crucial final moments of the game, the player who has possession of the ball is the one with the hand on it.