Chapter 11

Chapter 101,592 wordsCompleted

After dinner, Elizabeth escorts her sister Jane back to the drawing‑room where Miss Caroline Bingley, Mrs. Hurst, and Miss Bingley are assembled. Mr. Hurst, hoping to start a card‑game, is rebuffed by Mr. Darcy, who declares he does not wish to play; the Hurst sister is also told no cards will be played. Darcy takes a book, Miss Bingley reads the second volume of the same author, and after a perfunctory yawn declares her love of reading and a future desire for a personal library. She then shifts the conversation to the prospect of a ball at Netherfield, urging her brother Charles to consider the wishes of the party, and argues that conversation would be a more rational substitute for dancing.

Seeking to draw Darcy’s notice, Miss Bingley asks Elizabeth to walk about the room for refreshment. The walk prompts Darcy to look up; he observes the ladies’ motives, suggesting either they are secretly confiding in one another or they wish to display their figures, and says either motive would impede his joining them. Miss Bingley presses for an explanation; Darcy calmly lists the two possibilities, refusing to give a personal answer. The group then engages in a sarcastic debate about human flaws: Darcy admits a resentful, unyielding temper; Elizabeth and Miss Bingley exchange barbs about pride, vanity, and the danger of ridiculing wisdom. Miss Bingley, frustrated, calls for music; the pianoforte is played, and Darcy, after a brief recollection, listens without showing overt pleasure, noting that he must be careful not to give Elizabeth too much attention.