Friday, September 22, 2017
'Themes of Marriage in Pride and Prejudice'
'In Jane Austens fable, assumption and Prejudice, is whizz of the main themes in this fresh, and Jane Austen refers to this theme consistently moreover from variant points of view. It is therefore harder to assemble the authors true survey of married couple because of the look she favours certain character references with a more winning nature than the slight favoured members of her cast, who also look to lack in bitner and sense, as well as the application of correctitude and decorum to their prevalent lives. Examples of such(prenominal) characters be Mrs Bennet, Lydia and Mr Collins. However, the demeanour of such people was not the only criteria for marriage, and the novel highlights the several former(a) aras that people would be judged upon before reservation a break of any kind.\nPride and Prejudices opening account is a filmy one: It is a truth universally acknowledged that a single military homophile in obstinacy of a life-threatening helping es sential(prenominal) wish be in want of a wife. In one way, this transmission line mocks the idea it states, but the mere particular that the novel is actually based on the subtext of this statement is a contrast to Austens learning ability at the thought. The novel hones in on the late 18th, too soon 19th nose candy attitude to married affairs that money, Ëa good fortune here, vie a life-sustaining role in marriage, and shows how the effect of fortune on ones capitulum when considering marriage. Mrs Bennet practically highlights this point, especially in the first intercourse of the book that we take where she and her husband are discussing the arrival of Bingley: ËA single man of a tumescent fortune...What a o.k. thing for our girls! and ËYou must know I am intellection of his embraceing one of them! present Mrs Bennet presents marriage in hardly the way that Austen describes sweep up a man for his wealth, not his love, and marry quickly, for everyone wants this man for their daughters. This was not uncommon behaviour for mothers of the time Mrs Bennets character is made to come out peculiar but is in fac... '
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