Mrs. Hill
Mrs. Bennet wanted Mr. Bennet to take the family to Brighton.
Lydia Bennet is the youngest of the five sisters.
The Bennet family appears in Jane Austen's novel "Pride and Prejudice."
Longbourn
Mrs. Bennet's neighbor in Jane Austen's novel "Pride and Prejudice" was Lady Lucas. Lady Lucas and her family lived at Lucas Lodge, which was located near Longbourn, the Bennet family estate.
Brighton. :) Lydia is going to Brighton where the militia is as a companion to the colonel's wife. Mrs. Bennet fancies 'sea-bathing' and wishes the whole family could go.
The gardeners are friends of the Bennet family in "Pride and Prejudice." Mr. Gardiner is the brother of Mrs. Bennet, making him the uncle of the Bennet daughters. The gardeners play a supportive role in the family and help guide the Bennet girls through various situations in the novel.
The Bennets lived at an Estate called Longbourne.
Mr. Bennet had some kind of limitation on his ability to will his estate to his family; Austen says that Mr. Bennet's property may only be inherited by a mal. After Mr. Bennet's death his land will go to Mr. Collins, his closest male relative.
Mr. Collins is the cousin to the Bennet family.
Mr. Collins came to visit the Bennet family at their estate in order to fulfill his obligation as the nearest male relative to inherit the Bennet property, as well as to find a suitable wife among the Bennet daughters as advised by his patroness, Lady Catherine de Bourgh.
Mrs. Bennet wants Mr. Bennet to take the family to the seaside town of Brighton for the summer in Jane Austen's "Pride and Prejudice." She believes that a trip to a fashionable resort like Brighton will increase their social standing and provide opportunities for her daughters to find wealthy suitors.