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Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen-Book Review

Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen-Book Review

By D sapkotaPublished 3 years ago 4 min read
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I know that Jane Austen's novels are often categorized as love stories by women and there is something to be said about it, but there is no denying that there are recurring public themes in Austen's novels, themes that seem larger than the love stories themselves. Austen does not focus on the main characters who love life, which gives us a social background that allows us to not only understand and relate to the characters in question but also allows us to discover similarities between contemporary society and ours.

They saw their first impression of Austen’s first novel title with their own eyes and shared their misinterpretation of Darcy’s character. In this way, Elizabeth Bennet also used her study of characters and situations to make certain students proud and discriminating.

Elizabeth believes that Mr. The arrogant, quiet, proud, and wealthy Darcy who is not interested in Elizabeth is the last man to marry, and he begins to see through his prejudices that he is just an honest, shy gentleman. The situation in which Elizabeth rejects Darcy's proposal of marriage is a time when Austen empowers his female characters. When Elizabeth and Bennett responded politely, they got the right impression and told him that they did not love him deeply because dear George Wickham told their mother that he had ruined his life and that their dislike was reinforced by knowing that he had persuaded his friend Charles Bingley to stop courting Elizabeth's older sister Jane.

It also means that the novel is read as smoothly as we learn about events and characters as they are told, not others as Austen tells us.

Jane Austen's novel love for Manners since 1813 follows the development of the character of Elizabeth Bennet, a powerful opponent of this novel who learns the consequences of premature judgment and learns to appreciate the difference between supernatural beauty and reality. Reading this novel made me think of it as a story of truth and deception, which is one of the ways to express pride and prejudice. Pride, as Darcy points out earlier in Austen's novel, is self-absorbed and self-conscious.

Ancient English texts, crafted with distinctive and distinctive style, revolve around the tense relationship between Elizabeth Bennet, the daughter of a landowner, and Fitzwilliam Darcy, a wealthy landowner. Pride and prejudice is a joke made by the characters, but it is also a confirmed love affair. In other words, it plays Bennett's love interest, Mr. Fitzwill William Darcy and I prefer to read it as the story of Elizabeth Bennett.

Written and celebrated in the early 19th century, Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice is a must-read because it attracts your attention and makes you want to move on. The main characters Elizabeth and Darcy start the novel as haters and impossible friends, but as they work to better understand themselves and each other, they are more likely to fall in love with each other. The culmination of my study of Austen's Pride and Prejudice came at the end of the book in 1813, when Elizabeth Bennett received a letter from her aunt Mrs. Gardiner.

Elizabeth Bennet, the daughter of a landowner, and Fitzwilliam Darcy, a wealthy noble landowner, must overcome the so-called sins of pride and prejudice to love and marry.

One of the most popular novels in English literature is also Jane Austen's excellent work, Pride and Prejudice. As an avid book lover and avid classical music lover, it is a shame to say that it took me so long to read this wonderful Jane Austen novel. However, I admit that when I opened Austen's Pride and Prejudice last week, I was greeted by his famous first sentence, which asserted that "those who know the heart are not sure how to read it."

Jane Austen has created a novel of amazing perfection in a fast-paced series of social gatherings, conversations, books, fun and sleepless nights, full of disturbing thoughts and feelings. In my opinion, this is Austen's best work, and his professional skills as a writer are reflected in "Pride and Prejudice" in its solid structure, a few characters, and discarded chapters. Reading this book, I saw Darcy on his knees with no good news, and Elizabeth as a person of great self-control.

Austen emphasizes the importance of critical interpretation of the novel characters and their readers, introducing a moment in which he forces the reader to think twice about two actions. Sandra Lerner's sequence, Pride and Prejudice: The Second Appearance, enhances the story by imagining what might have happened to the characters in the novel.

After reading this book and Austen’s book, we are enlightened by the world, at least through the eyes of the compelling character Eliza Bennet. Curtis Sittenfeld Eligible’s novel plays the characters of Pride and Prejudice in modern Cincinnati, where Bennett’s parents, social riders from Cincinnati, faced difficult times.

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D sapkota

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