Chapter 16

Chapter 153,352 wordsCompleted

Mr. Collins, having overcome his scruples about leaving the Bennet household for a single evening, arrives in Meryton with five of his cousins. As the girls enter the drawing‑room they learn that Mr. Wickham has accepted their uncle’s invitation and is already in the house. Collins, struck by the size and furniture of the room, compares it to the summer breakfast parlour at Rosings; Mrs. Phillips, the housekeeper, is impressed by his description and vows to spread the compliment among her neighbours. Collins proceeds to praise Lady Catherine de Bourgh and his own modest home, gaining Mrs. Phillips’s attentive listening, while the girls grow impatient waiting for entertainment.

When the gentlemen appear, Mr. Wickham makes a striking entrance. Elizabeth notes that she had not been thinking of him before, but is immediately drawn to his handsome appearance and agreeable manner. Wickham quickly becomes the centre of attention for the young ladies, especially Elizabeth, while the militia officers, including the “broad‑faced, stuffy” Uncle Phillips, linger in the background. Collins feels insignificant beside them but is refreshed by Mrs. Phillips’s provisions of coffee and muffins.

Card‑tables are set; Collins takes a seat at whist, admitting his ignorance of the game and offering to improve. Wickham declines to play and instead sits at the other table between Elizabeth and Lydia. Lydia, a determined talker, soon diverts her attention to lottery tickets, betting eagerly and speaking loudly. This gives Wickham leisure to converse privately with Elizabeth. She asks about Darcy, hoping to learn the truth of his character. Wickham, having known the Darcy family “from his infancy,” offers a vehemently negative portrait: he describes Darcy as proud, unkind, and jealous; he claims Darcy’s father was a benevolent man and that Darcy has treated Wickham scandalously, notably by failing to honor a promised church living (the “best living”) that the late Mr. Darcy had intended for him. Wickham explains that the bequest was vague, allowing Darcy to withhold it, and that he was left without recourse. He attributes Darcy’s cruelty partly to jealousy over the late father’s attachment to Wickham.

The conversation shifts to the de Bourgh family. Wickham informs Elizabeth that Lady Catherine and Lady Anne Darcy are sisters, that Miss de Bourgh (Lady Catherine’s daughter) will inherit a large fortune, and that there are rumors of a future union of the de Bourgh and Darcy estates. Elizabeth, recalling Miss Bingley’s vain attentions, notes the similarity. Throughout, Mrs. Phillips interjects, eager to gossip and to disseminate the news about Lady Catherine’s connections.

After the card‑game, the party moves to supper. Wickham’s manners receive universal praise; he speaks eloquently on general topics, and his compliments win the favour of the assembled guests. Elizabeth returns home with Wickham’s revelations dominant in her thoughts, while Lydia continues her noisy discussion of lottery winnings and Mr. Collins fills the carriage ride with a long, self‑congratulatory description of the Phillips family’s civility and his own recent losses at whist. The chapter ends with the Bennet sisters still awaiting further news of Jane’s health and the lingering effect of Wickham’s hostile account of Darcy on Elizabeth’s opinion of him.