Chapter 42

Chapter 401,827 wordsCompleted

Elizabeth reflects bitterly on her father’s unhappy marriage, contrasting his youthful charm with his wife’s “weak understanding” and lamenting the resulting domestic discord. She muses on the disadvantages that ill‑matched unions impose on children and on the lack of genuine affection in her own home. The prospect of a summer tour to the Lakes, long‑awaited by Elizabeth, is abruptly altered when Mr. and Mrs. Gardiner inform the family that business prevents them from departing until mid‑July and requires a return to London after a month, making a lengthy Lakes excursion impossible. Consequently, the Bennets agree to a shortened three‑week tour limited to Derbyshire.

Upon arriving in Derbyshire, the group travels toward the small town of Lambton, a former residence of Mrs. Gardiner, and learns that Pemberley lies a mile or two beyond their route. Mrs. Gardiner expresses a desire to revisit the estate, Mr. Gardiner consents, and Elizabeth is asked for her opinion. She initially resists, claiming fatigue with grand houses, but the thought of meeting Mr. Darcy at Pemberley unsettles her. After a brief, furtive interrogation of the chambermaid—asking whether Pemberley is a fine place, who owns it, and whether the family is in residence—she receives a reassuring negative that the family is absent for the summer. Relieved, she masks her curiosity with feigned indifference and agrees to the visit. The chapter concludes with the party deciding to go to Pemberley.