Pages

Subscribe:

Wednesday, September 6, 2017

'Themes of Marriage in Pride and Prejudice'

'In Jane Austens refreshful, pride and Prejudice, is whiz of the chief(prenominal) antecedents in this novel, and Jane Austen refers to this theme consistently but from different points of view. It is then harder to accumu tardy the authors legitimate perspective of trade union because of the elan she favours authoritative characters with a to a greater extent agreeable constitution than the less favoured members of her cast, who similarly seem to wishing in sort and sense, as comfortably as the exertion of propriety and decorum to their everyday lives. Examples of such(prenominal) characters are Mrs bennet, Lydia and Mr Collins. However, the demeanour of such race was not the whole criteria for marriage, and the novel highlights the several(prenominal) other areas that mess would be judged upon beforehand making a match of all kind.\nPride and Prejudices inception financial statement is a bold unitary: It is a truth universally declare that a mavin homo sexual in possession of a favourable endangerment must desire be in want of a wife. In matchless way, this line mocks the supposition it states, but the continent fact that the novel is really establish on the subtext of this statement is a assembly line to Austens humour at the thought. The novel hones in on the late 18th, early nineteenth century berth to matrimonial affairs that money, Ëœa good fortune here, played a vital occasion in marriage, and shows how the take of fortune on ones mind when considering marriage. Mrs bennet often highlights this point, oddly in the offshoot conversation of the bind that we read where she and her husband are discussing the stretch of Bingley: ËœA superstar man of a large fortune...What a fine issue for our girls! and ËœYou must go I am thinking of his marrying one of them! Here Mrs Bennet presents marriage in exactly the way that Austen describes marry a man for his wealth, not his love, and marry quickly, for everyone wan ts this man for their daughters. This was not particular(prenominal) behaviour for mothers of the m Mrs Bennets character is make to seem ludicrous but is in fac... '

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.