C h a p t e r 4 Mr Collins
'I hope, my dear,' said Mr Bennet to his wife, as they were at
breakfast the next morning, 'that you have ordered a good dinner
today, because I have reason to expect an addition to our family
party.'
'Whom do you mean, my dear? I know of nobody that is
coming, I am sure, unless Charlotte Lucas should happen to call,
and I hope my dinners are good enough for her!
'The person of whom I speak is a gentleman and a stranger.'
Mrs Bennet's eyes brightened. 'A gentleman and a stranger! It
is Mr Bingley, I am sure! Why, Jane, you never mentioned a word
about this! But — good heavens! How unlucky! There is not a bit
of fish to be got today! Lydia, my love, ring the bell. I must speak
to the cook immediately.'
'It is not Mr Bingley,' said her husband. 'It is a person whom I
have never seen in the whole of my life.'
This caused general astonishment, and he had the pleasure of
being eagerly questioned by his wife and all five of his daughters
at once.
After amusing himself for some time by not answering their
questions, he explained:
'A short time ago I received a letter. It was from my cousin,
Mr Collins, who, when I am dead, may put you all out of this
house as soon as he pleases.'
Mr Bennet's property was, unfortunately for his daughters, to
pass by law after his death to his nearest male relative, a distant
cousin.
'Oh, my dear,' cried his wife, 'I cannot bear to hear that
mentioned. Please do not talk of that hateful man.' It was a
subject on which she could never see reason.
'But if you will listen to his letter, you may perhaps be a little
softened by his manner of expressing himself:
18
HUNSFORD PARSONAGE NEAR WESTERHAM,
KENT
15th October
Dear Sir,
The disagreement that existed between yourself and my
honoured father always caused me much anxiety, and since his
death I have frequently wished for a renewal of friendship
between our two branches of the family.
My mind is now made up on the subject. I have recently
become a minister of the church and I have been fortunate
enough to become the object of attention of the Lady Catherine
de Bourgh. By her generosity I have been presented with a
valuable position in this area, where I shall try to behave with
grateful respect towards her.
As a churchman, I feel it to be my duty to encourage peace
among all families within my influence, and for these reasons I
consider that my offer of friendship is deserving of praise, and
that the fact that I am heir to your property will be kindly
forgiven by you.
I am troubled at being the means of harming your daughters,
and beg to apologize for it, as well as to inform you of my
readiness to do what is in my power to lessen the wrong done to
them.
If you have no objection to receiving me into your house, I
intend to visit you and your family on Monday next week, at
four o'clock, and would be thankful to remain as your guest until
the Saturday of the following week.
I remain, dear sir, with respectful greetings to your lady and
daughters, your well-wisher and friend,
WILLIAM COLLINS.
'At four o'clock, therefore, we may expect this peace-making
gentleman,' said Mr Bennet, as he folded up the letter. 'He seems
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a most dutiful and polite young man.'
'There is some sense in what he says about trying to lessen the
harm done to the girls,' his wife agreed.
'Though it is difficult,' said Jane, 'to guess in what way he
intends to do so.'
Elizabeth was chiefly struck with his high degree of respect for
Lady Catherine. As for her mother, Mr Collins's letter had taken
away much of her unfriendly feeling, and she prepared herself to
see him with a calmness that astonished her husband and
daughters.
•
Mr Collins arrived on time, and was received with great
politeness by the whole family. Mr Bennet said little, but the
ladies were ready enough to talk, and Mr Collins seemed very
willing to do so himself. He was a tall, heavy-looking young man
of about twenty-five. His manner was serious and his behaviour
very formal. He had not been seated long before he began to
offer his congratulations to Mrs Bennet on having such a fine
family of daughters, and to admire their beauty. He added that he
did not doubt that she would in time see them all well settled in
marriage. This speech was not much to the taste of some of his
hearers, but Mrs Bennet answered most readily:
'You are very kind, sir, I am sure, and I wish with all my heart
that it may be so, or they will be poor enough. These matters are
settled in such a strange way.'
'I am conscious, madam, of the injustice to your lovely
daughters, but they may be sure that I have come prepared to
admire them. At present I will say no more, but perhaps, when we
are better acquainted ...'
He was interrupted by the announcement of dinner, and the
girls smiled at each other. They were not the only objects of Mr
Collins's admiration. The hall, the dining room, and all its
20
furniture, were examined and highly praised, and his approval
would have touched Mrs Bennet's heart, if she had not believed
that he was viewing it all as his own future property. The dinner,
too, in its turn, was much admired, and he begged to know
which of his cousins had prepared the excellent meal. But here
he was corrected by Mrs Bennet, who informed him rather
sharply that they could very well afford to keep a good cook, and
that her daughters had nothing to do in the kitchen. He begged
pardon for having displeased her. She replied in a softer voice that
she was not at all offended, but he continued to apologize for
about a quarter of an hour.
After dinner, Mr Bennet thought it was time to have some
conversation, with his guest. He therefore chose a subject on
which he expected Mr Collins would be pleased to speak, and
began by observing that he seemed very fortunate in receiving
such an excellent living from Lady Catherine. Mr Bennet could
not have thought of a better beginning. Mr Collins praised her
loudly, expressing himself in an extremely respectful manner. By
teatime his host had had enough, and was glad to take the young
man into the sitting room and invite him to read to the ladies. Mr
Collins readily agreed, and a book was produced, but at the sight
of it he quickly stated, begging pardon, that he never read works
of fiction. Kitty and Lydia looked at him in surprise. Other books
were offered, and he chose a collection of writings on matters of
religion. Lydia turned away as he opened the book, and before he
had, in a dull voice, read three pages, she interrupted to speak to
her mother. Her two oldest sisters urged her to hold her tongue,
but Mr Collins, much offended, laid the book down.
•
Mr Collins was not a sensible man, and neither education nor
society had improved him much. He was too conscious of his
own importance, and, at the same time, too afraid of giving
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offence, especially to those above him in rank.
A fortunate chance had brought him to the attention of Lady
Catherine de Bourgh, when the position at Hunsford became
free. Having now a good house and a large enough income, he
intended to marry. In ending the quarrel with the Longbourn
family, he was thinking of a wife, as he meant to choose one of
the daughters. This was his plan of lessening the wrong done to
them by his being the heir to their father's property, and he
thought it was an extremely generous one.
His plan did not change on seeing them. Miss Jane Bennet's
beautiful face soon attracted him, and for the first evening she was
his settled choice. But the next morning caused a change,
because in a quarter of an hour's private talk with Mrs Bennet
before breakfast, he received a warning about the cousin whom
he had fixed on. 'As to her younger daughters, she could not be
sure, she could not answer immediately — but her oldest daughter,
she must just mention, she felt it her duty to state, was likely to be
very soon engaged to be married.'
Mr Collins had only to change from Jane to Elizabeth. It was
done in a moment. Elizabeth, next to Jane both in birth and
beauty, followed her as his choice as a matter of course.
Mrs Bennet was pleased with this suggestion, and trusted that
she might soon have two daughters married. The man whom she
could not bear to speak of the day before now stood high in her
regard.
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