Friday, August 2, 2019
Compare and contrast the variety of attitudes to marriage as expressed
Compare and contrast the variety of attitudes to marriage as expressed  by different characters in Pride and Prejudice.    Pride and Prejudice is one of the most famous novels in the history of  English Literature. Written in the year of 1813 by the very well known  author, Jane Austen, whose novels all examine the nature of love. The  general tone of the novel is light, but serious.    Pride and Prejudice is a story that focuses on the life of marriage,  it is full of love. Money and wealth is also a main aspect of the  book.    Marriage in Pride and Prejudice is acknowledged in that a single man  in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a wife. The first  sentence of Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice could not have better  prepared the reader for the rest of the novel. The thread that sews  together the lives of all the characters in the novel is the  establishment of marriage. Jane Austen uses the Bennet family of  Longbourn to illustrate the good and bad reasons behind marriage.    Mrs. Bennet is an irritating woman whose main goal in life is to get  her five daughters married. It might be correct in assuming that she  felt social and financial pressure to do so. Her husband's estate was  entailed to his nephew, Mr. Collins, when Mr. Bennet was to pass away.  Therefore, Mrs. Bennet wanted her daughters to have financial  stability elsewhere in case of their father's death.    In the time period of this story there was very little social  acceptance of women who were single their whole lives. For the most  part, women could not acquire money on their own without inheriting or  marrying into good fortune. Women who could not find a husband were  often referred to as ââ¬Å"old maidsâ⬠ and lived their whole lives with  their p...              ...daughters were pleasant and appear to be ideal. Jane  had longed for Mr. Bingley for quite a while. Bingley was handsome,  rich, kind, and well liked. He and Jane shared many conversations and  had complimentary personalities. They were pleasantly matched and I  believe that they shared a happy life together.    Elizabeth (the main character in the novel) and Darcy's marriage was  an excellent match. Though she thought him a cold, aloof snobbish man  at first, this soon evolved into something else, it was love. They  were equal in intellect, had physical attraction and deep love for one  another, financial security, romance, and companionship. They are the  two I believe would be most happy in life. Jane Austen wanted the  reader to know that marriage should be approached as a package deal -  a package of love, financial stability, physical attraction, and  happiness.                      
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