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Mr. Bennet wasinfuriated about the marriage
Mr. Bennet was relieved to know that Lydia and Wickham were finally married.
Mr. Bennet wasinfuriated about the marriage
Mr. Bennet was infuriated about the marriage and refused to allow the couple to enter Longbourn.
Lydia and Wickham go first to Longbourne to visit her family. After the visit, they go to Newcastle, where Wickham is to join a regiment in which he has a commission.
No, Jane and Elizabeth did not send Lydia money after she married Wickham. It was Mr. Darcy who provided financial assistance to ensure Lydia and Wickham's marriage could take place and to settle their debts.
That her mother is a silly woman with no decorum whatsoever, her father - although a gentleman - is less interested in observing the contemporary etiquette and either ignores or mocks his own family. As for Lizzie's sisters, except Jane, of course, they are vane, silly, uneducated, air-headed and brash.
Jane, in a letter.
Mr. Darcy arranges Wickham's marriage to Lydia and pays for all the expenses, including settling Wickham's debts and providing for the couple's future financial security. Darcy does so to protect the reputation of his sister, Georgiana, who had been the target of Wickham's previous attempts to marry for financial gain.
There are two motives for Darcy to help the Bennets. One is that he is in love with Lizzy and wants to relieve her distress at Julia's elopement with Wickham. Another is that he believes he is partly to blame for the elopement because he had not exposed Wickham's nature, which he had failed to do out of personal pride.
In Jane Austen's novel "Pride and Prejudice," it is Mr. Darcy who finds Lydia Bennet and George Wickham after they elope. Mr. Darcy then arranges for their marriage to avoid scandal and uphold Lydia's reputation.
Lydia was helped in her elopement with Mr. Wickham by George Wickham himself, as he was the one she eloped with.