Chapter 30

Chapter 291,229 wordsCompleted

Sir William Lucas stays at the Hunsford Parsonage for a week. While he is present, Mr. Collins spends his mornings driving Sir William in his gig and showing him the countryside, pointing out the traffic on the lane, especially Miss de Bourgh’s frequent phaeton trips. After Sir William’s departure, the Collins household resumes its normal routine: Mr. Collins occupies the hours between breakfast and dinner working in the garden, writing in his book‑room that faces the road, and Charlotte keeps the ladies in a backward sitting‑room rather than the larger dining‑parlour, a decision Elizabeth understands as a means to keep Mr. Collins in his own apartment.

Lady Catherine de Bourgh makes almost daily brief visits, stopping at the Parsonage in her phaeton, speaking briefly with Charlotte, and rarely alighting. She also visits regularly in a more authoritative capacity: she inspects the house, critiques the furniture arrangement, finds fault with the housemaid, and, though not a county magistrate, arbitrates petty disputes among the cottagers, scolding them into conformity. Dinners at Rosings occur about twice a week, but the Collinses, limited by modest means, cannot fully partake in the lifestyle there.

Elizabeth discovers a secluded, sheltered grove that runs along the edge of the park. She walks this path alone, feeling it is beyond Lady Catherine’s curiosity and enjoying the quiet escape it offers.

As Easter approaches, word spreads that Mr. Darcy is expected at Rosings within a few weeks, accompanied by his cousin Colonel Fitzwilliam, the younger son of his uncle. Mr. Collins, eager to be first to report, watches the lane for the approaching carriage. When the gentlemen’s carriage turns into the park, he announces their arrival.

Colonel Fitzwilliam, about thirty, is pleasant, well‑mannered, and the more talkative of the two. He leads the party into the Parsonage, greets Mrs. Collins with polite compliments, and engages the family in easy conversation about the house and garden. Mr. Darcy, composed and reserved, offers a brief observation on the house and garden, then falls silent. He politely compliments Mrs. Collins but otherwise speaks little.

Elizabeth curtseys to Mr. Darcy without saying a word. After a pause, Darcy asks Elizabeth after the health of her family. She replies and then mentions that her eldest sister has been in town for three months, probing whether Darcy has ever met her. Darcy answers that he has never met a Miss Bennet, appearing mildly confused. Colonel Fitzwilliam continues the light conversation, while Darcy remains quiet.

The gentlemen linger only briefly, then depart, leaving Elizabeth with a tentative personal encounter with Mr. Darcy that hints at future tension.