Chapter 39

Chapter 381,626 wordsCompleted

In the second week of May the three Bennet sisters—Elizabeth, Jane and Kitty—depart from Gracechurch Street toward an unnamed town in Hertfordshire. As they approach the inn where Mr. Bennet’s carriage is waiting, they see Kitty and Lydia looking out of an upstairs dining‑room. Kitty and Lydia have been inside for over an hour, “happily employed” in visiting a milliner, watching a sentinel, and preparing a salad and cucumber. After greeting their sisters, Kitty displays a cold meat spread from the inn’s larder and boasts that they will treat everyone, but demand a loan because they have spent all their money at the shop.

Lydia then shows off a newly bought bonnet, criticizing its ugliness but saying she will alter it and add prettier satin trim. When her sisters disparage the bonnet, Lydia dismisses the criticism, noting that far uglier ones were on sale and that the bonnet will not matter after the “——shire” (presumably a regiment) leaves Meryton for Brighton in two weeks. Elizabeth expresses excitement about a Brighton encampment with soldiers, imagining it as a delightful summer scheme.

Lydia proceeds to share “excellent news” about Mr. Wickham: she claims there is no danger of Wickham marrying Mary King, who has gone to stay with an uncle in Liverpool, and that Wickham is “safe.” The sisters discuss Mary King’s foolishness and the lack of any attachment between Wickham and her. Elizabeth is shocked by Lydia’s coarse language, which mirrors sentiments she herself has previously felt.

After the sisters finish eating and the elders pay, the carriage is ordered. Lydia comments on how cramped the carriage is, proud of her bonnet purchase, and urges everyone to be comfortable and chat. She asks each sister about their recent romantic experiences, pressuring them to have husbands before they turn twenty‑three, and recounts a recent frivolous episode with Colonel Forster where they dressed a man, Chamberlayne, in women’s clothing for amusement. Lydia’s loud narration continues throughout the journey back to Longbourn.

On arrival, the family’s reception is warm. Mrs. Bennet is delighted to see Jane looking as beautiful as ever. Mr. Bennet repeatedly tells Elizabeth how glad he is that she has returned. The Lucases gather with Maria to hear the news, while Lady Lucas inquires about her eldest daughter’s welfare. Mrs. Bennet multitasks, collecting fashion updates from Jane and broadcasting them to the younger Lucases. Lydia, louder than anyone, recounts the morning’s pleasures to whoever will listen, boasting about their entertainments and the cold luncheon they served.

Mary Lucas responds gravely, preferring a book to such “pleasures,” but Lydia ignores her. Later Lydia pushes the younger sisters to travel to Meryton, but Elizabeth opposes, fearing another encounter with Wickham. She notes that the regiment’s upcoming departure offers her relief, and that her father is vague about allowing a Brighton trip, while her mother remains hopeful.