Chapter 30-32
Sir William departs after a week, satisfied with his
daughter’s contentment. Shortly thereafter, Darcy and a cousin named Colonel
Fitzwilliam visit their aunt at Rosings. When Mr. Collins pays his respects,
the two men accompany him back to his parsonage and visit briefly with
Elizabeth and Charlotte.
Another invitation to Rosings follows, and Colonel
Fitzwilliam pays special attention to Elizabeth during the dinner. After the
meal, she plays the pianoforte and pokes fun at Darcy, informing Colonel
Fitzwilliam of his bad behavior at the Meryton ball, at which he refused to
dance with her. Lady Catherine lectures Elizabeth on the proper manner of
playing the instrument, forcing Elizabeth to remain at the keyboard until the
end of the evening.
The next day, Darcy visits the parsonage and tells Elizabeth
that Bingley is unlikely to spend much of his time at Netherfield Park in the
future. The rest of their conversation is awkward, and when Darcy departs,
Charlotte declares that he must be in love with Elizabeth, or he would never
have called in such an odd manner. In the days that follow, both Darcy and his
cousin visit frequently, however, and eventually Charlotte surmises that it is
perhaps Colonel Fitzwilliam who is interested in Elizabeth.
Chapters 33–34
Elizabeth encounters Darcy and his cousin frequently in her
walks through the countryside. During one conversation, Colonel Fitzwilliam
mentions that Darcy claims to have recently saved a friend from an imprudent
marriage. Elizabeth conjectures that the “friend” was Bingley and the
“imprudent marriage” a marriage to Jane. She views Darcy as the agent of her
sister’s unhappiness.
Alone at the parsonage, Elizabeth is still mulling over what
Fitzwilliam has told her when Darcy enters and abruptly declares his love for
her. His proposal of marriage dwells at length upon her social inferiority, and
Elizabeth’s initially polite rejection turns into an angry accusation. She
demands to know if he sabotaged Jane’s romance with Bingley; he admits that he
did. She then repeats Wickham’s accusations and declares that she thinks Darcy
to be proud and selfish and that marriage to him is utterly unthinkable. Darcy
grimly departs.
Analysis Chapters 30–34
Mrs. Gardiner tends to function as the voice of reason in the
novel, and her criticism of Wickham counters Elizabeth’s unwillingness to
question his purposes. Mrs. Gardiner ascribes a mercenary motive to Wickham’s
interest in Miss King, whereas Elizabeth defends him by asking her aunt “what .
. . the difference [is] in matrimonial affairs, between the mercenary and the
prudent motive.” This does seem a fine question, and not one her aunt can
readily answer. But in asking the question, Elizabeth seems to violate her own
principles—she herself has already refused to marry Mr. Collins for social
advantage, and she does so again when Darcy proposes. It appears that sympathy
for Wickham leads Elizabeth to betray her conscience.
The visit to Rosings introduces Lady Catherine de Bourgh, who
serves as another vehicle for Austen’s criticism of snobbery. Lady Catherine’s
favorite pastime is ordering everyone else about (“Elizabeth found that nothing
was beneath this great Lady’s attention, which could furnish her with an
occasion of dictating to others”). The only individual who dares to stand up to
the haughty Lady Catherine is Elizabeth (unsurprisingly, as elsewhere she sees
through the pretensions of pompous and arrogant people like Mr. Collins and
Miss Bingley). When Lady Catherine criticizes the Bennet sisters’ upbringing,
Elizabeth defends her family, “suspect[ing] herself to be the first creature
who had ever dared to trifle with so much dignified impertinence.” The same
dignified impertinence with which Elizabeth combats Lady Catherine’s
preconceptions reappears later in her refusal to let Lady Catherine prevent her
from marrying Darcy.
Darcy’s proposal is the turning point of Pride and Prejudice. Until he asks her to marry him, Elizabeth’s main preoccupation with Darcy centers around dislike; after the proposal, the novel chronicles the slow, steady growth of her love. At the moment, however, Elizabeth’s attitude toward Darcy corresponds to the judgments she has already made about him. She refuses him because she thinks that he is too arrogant, part of her first impression of him at the Meryton ball, and because of the role she believes he played in disinheriting Wickham and his admitted role in disrupting the romance between Jane and Bingley.
Just as Elizabeth yields to her prejudices (she has not yet
heard Darcy’s side of the story), Darcy allows his pride to guide him. In his
proposal to Elizabeth, he spends more time emphasizing Elizabeth’s lower rank
than actually asking her to marry him (“he was not more eloquent on the subject
of tenderness than of pride”). This turning point thus occurs with the two
central characters occupying seemingly irreconcilable emotional locations,
leaving the reader, in the words of critic Douglas Bush, “almost exactly in the
middle of the book, wondering if and how the chasm . . . can be bridged.”