second chapter summary
Eager to
learn more, Mrs. Bennet and the girls question Mr. Bennet incessantly. A few
days later, Mr. Bingley returns the visit, though he does not meet Mr. Bennet’s
daughters. The Bennets invite him to dinner shortly afterward, but he is called
away to London. Soon, however, he returns to Netherfield Park with his two
sisters, his brother-in-law, and a friend named Darcy.Mr. Bingley
and his guests go to a ball in the nearby town of Meryton. The Bennet sisters
attend the ball with their mother. The eldest daughter, Jane, dances twice with
Bingley. Within Elizabeth’s hearing, Bingley exclaims to Darcy that Jane is
“the most beautiful creature”he has ever beheld. Bingley suggests that Darcy
dance with Elizabeth, but Darcy refuses, saying, “she is tolerable, but not
handsome enough to tempt me.” He proceeds to declare that he has no interest in
women who are “slighted by other men.” Elizabeth takes an immediate and
understandable disliking to Darcy. Because of Darcy’s comments and refusal to
dance with anyone not rich and well bred, the neighborhood takes a similar
dislike; it declares Bingley, on the other hand, to be quite “amiable.”At the end
of the evening, the Bennet women return to their house, where Mrs. Bennet
regales her husband with stories from the evening until he insists that she be
silent. Upstairs, Jane relates to Elizabeth her surprise that Bingley danced
with her twice, and Elizabeth replies that Jane is unaware of her own beauty.
Both girls agree that Bingley’s sisters are not well-mannered, but whereas Jane
insists that they are charming in close conversation, Elizabeth continues to
harbor a dislike for them.
The narrator
then provides the reader with Bingley’s background: he inherited a hundred
thousand pounds from his father, but for now, in spite of his sisters’
complaints, he lives as a tenant. His friendship with Darcy is “steady,”
despite the contrast in their characters, illustrated in their respective
reactions to the Meryton ball. Bingley, cheerful and sociable, has an excellent
time and is taken with Jane; Darcy, more clever but less tactful, finds the
people dull and even criticizes Jane for smiling too often (Bingley’s sisters,
on the other hand, find Jane to be “a sweet girl,” and Bingley therefore feels
secure in his good opinion of her).
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