Jane Austen discussion
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Question about P&P
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Jane Austen famously worked on her novel for many years, and the final version we are all acquainted w..."
He wouldn't have proposed at all. He just took advantage of the fact that she didn't come.


I think a case might be made that he didn't even come to the parsonage intending to propose.
Jane Austen famously worked on her novel for many years, and the final version we are all acquainted with is the labour of her youth, and has undergone several revisions. So I am sure that she must have known the answer to this, but it is just not apparent to me from the text, no matter how often I read it. Here it is: when Darcy proposes to Elizabeth, he does so in the Hunsford parsonage, because she refuses to go to Rosings, because of what she heard from Colonel Fitzwilliam about Darcy's interfering in Bingley's plans to propose to Jane, right? But if that is the case then Darcy was going to propose to her in Rosings that evening, right? Just logistically speaking, how do you think he meant to go about doing that, considering Lady Catherine's near constant attention to him? It would have been an evening, too, so it's not like he could have asked her to go away with him for a bit. Yet they would have to be private to talk, and for him to make his confession. Am I missing something? Does anybody have any ideas? What would have happened, had Elizabeth gone to Rosings that evening after all?