Mr. Collins proposed to Elizabeth Bennett first, but she rejected his proposal. He then proposed to Charlotte Lucas, who accepted him.
Darcy proposed to Elizabeth for the first time.
Mr. Collins proposed to Elizabeth Bennet in Chapter 19 of Jane Austen's "Pride and Prejudice."
Mr. Darcy proposed to Elizabeth for the first time before Elizabeth went on vacation with the Gardiners.
She was proposed to three times. First by Mr. Collins, whom she refused. Secondly by Mr. Darcy, whom she intially also refused. And the third time she was proposed to by Darcy again, whom she accepted. =)
She said no and that she didn't understand why he was proposing to her and ran off.
elizabeth 1st for not accepting her hand in marriage as well as killing mary queen of scots. Philip wanted England back so he proposed to Elizabeth. Elizabeth said no because of religion wise. Elizabeth was Protestant and Philip was Catholic.
Darcy gave Elizabeth a letter the morning after he had proposed, and she refused, at Hunsford, in Kent. The purpose of the letter was to defend himself from the accusations she had made against him as she rejected him.
Thomas Seymour never proposed to Elizabeth! He was Katherine parr's husband, and Elizabeth's guardian when she was taken in by Katherine parr after hermother's death. I'm pretty sure guardians do NOT propose to the children in their care, specially if they are married men!
Lady Catherine has cherished the hope that Darcy would marry her own daughter, Anne, for Anne's entire life. When she heard that Darcy might have proposed to Elizabeth, she wanted to find out the truth of the matter, and prevent a marriage between Elizabeth and Darcy. So she confronted Elizabeth on the subject.
No. Tony Blair proposed knighting George Harrison after his death, but nothing came of it.
Elizabeth and Darcy meet at Pemberley several weeks after Darcy proposed to Elizabeth. Darcy is happy to see her, he invites her family over for tea and fishing hoping he can convince Elizabeth to marry him. Elizabeth is happy but embarrassed to see him. Elizabeth had previously believed that Darcy had done evil things, but had since learned otherwise and felt guilty of admonishing him during his proposal.