Chapter 34

Chapter 332,088 wordsCompleted

After the departure of the other guests, Elizabeth Bennet stays alone in the drawing‑room, examining the letters Jane has written since arriving in Kent. She notes the loss of Jane’s usual cheerfulness and feels a growing unease. While she is studying, the door‑bell rings and, to her astonishment, Mr. Darcy enters. He inquires politely after her health, then sits briefly before walking about the room. After a few minutes of silence, Darcy approaches Elizabeth in an agitated tone and declares, “In vain I have struggled. It will not do. My feelings will not be repressed. You must allow me to tell you how ardently I admire and love you.” Elizabeth is stunned, colourless, and silent. Darcy proceeds to repeat his declaration, speaking of his long‑held affection and his belief that she will accept his hand. He also mentions the obstacles of her family’s lower connections and his own pride. Elizabeth, still shocked, replies with a formal, cold refusal, stating that she can never return his affection, that she never desired his opinion, and that accepting him would be a betrayal of her sister Jane. She accuses Darcy of having separated Jane and Mr. Bingley, of ruining her sister’s happiness, and of acting as the principal cause of their misfortune. Darcy listens, his complexion paling, but answers without remorse, admitting that he had worked to keep Bingley away from Jane and that he had acted with “kindness to him rather than to himself.” The debate widens: Elizabeth condemns Darcy for his treatment of Mr. Wickham, charging him with reducing Wickham to poverty and denying him his rightful inheritance. Darcy defends his actions, claiming they were driven by principle and that he could not have concealed his true motives. Elizabeth continues, describing how his arrogance, conceit, and disdain had formed a “groundwork of disapprobation” that made her resolve never to marry him. Darcy, visibly mortified, offers a brief, embarrassed apology, acknowledging his faults and asking forgiveness. He then departs the room, leaving Elizabeth alone. Overcome with emotion, she collapses into a chair, weeping for half an hour, reflecting on the absurdity of a marriage proposal from a man she now despises for his pride, cruelty, and interference in her sister’s affairs. The chapter ends with Elizabeth’s mind racing, her heart pained, and the sound of Lady Catherine’s carriage signalling the approach of further unwelcome encounters.