Chapter 48

Chapter 462,251 wordsCompleted

Mr. Gardiner arrives at Longbourn after receiving the alarming news of Lydia and Wickham’s disappearance. He reports that he has already journeyed to London and will continue searching, consulting Colonel Forster and any of Wickham’s acquaintances. He explains that Wickham’s whereabouts are unknown, but that the urgency demands immediate action. The Bennet family, already on edge from days of anxious waiting for letters, gathers in the drawing‑room as Mr. Gardiner reads aloud the letter Lydia sent to her friend Harriet. In the letter Lydia declares her intention to marry Wickham at Gretna Green and urges secrecy, insisting that no one should interfere.

Mrs. Bennet erupts in hysteria, blaming Mr. Bennet, her sisters, and even the Gardiners for the scandal, and repeatedly exclaims “What a disaster!” while clutching her chest. Mr. Bennet attempts to restore order, urging the family to keep quiet and to let the men handle the matter, but his words are drowned out by his wife’s cries. Mr. Gardiner calmly reassures the family, noting that the letter gives a clear destination and that he will accompany the Gardiners to London at first light, urging them to prepare for a swift departure.

Amid the turmoil, Mary Bennet rises to deliver a solemn moral lecture, warning of the irretrievable loss of a woman’s virtue once she has fallen “into a state of disgrace,” and stressing the danger of imprudent marriages. Her admonition is received with quiet attention, contrasting with Mrs. Bennet’s frantic wailing.

The chapter concludes with the Gardiners packing their trunks, the Bennet sisters assisting where they can, and the whole household in a state of frantic anxiety as they prepare to set out for London to pursue Lydia and Wickham, with the hope of preventing the marriage at the Scottish border.