Chapter 32

Chapter 311,500 wordsCompleted

Elizabeth Bennet is alone at the Parsonage the next morning, writing a letter to Jane while Mrs. Collins and Maria are away. A sudden knock brings Mr. Darcy, who apologises for intruding and takes a seat. To avoid impertinent questions, Elizabeth immediately brings up the hurried departure from Netherfield in November, asking what Mr. Bingley intends now. Darcy replies that he has heard no firm statement from Bingley about leaving, but it is probable Bingley will spend little time at Netherfield and may eventually give it up if a suitable buyer appears. The conversation shifts to Mr. Collins’s marriage; Elizabeth compliments Lady Catherine’s kindness to Mr. Collins and remarks that the match is sensible though perhaps not the wisest. They debate the practicality of the Collins’s residence being fifty miles from Elizabeth’s family, with Darcy calling the distance “very easy,” which Elizabeth rejects, insisting the distance is considerable. Darcy draws his chair nearer, asserts that Elizabeth cannot claim such strong local attachment because she has not always been at Longbourn, and then, in a colder tone, asks whether she is pleased with Kent. They exchange a brief, courteous dialogue about the countryside. Their talk is interrupted by the entrance of Charlotte Lucas and her sister Maria, who have just returned from a walk. Charlotte, having overheard part of the conversation, declares that Darcy must be in love with Elizabeth. Elizabeth points out that Darcy has been silent and has shown no overt affection. The three women discuss possible motives for Darcy’s visit, concluding that the season’s idle weather and lack of field‑sport give him nothing to do, so his arrival is likely driven by curiosity rather than romance. The chapter ends with the ladies left uncertain about Darcy’s true feelings.