Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Romantic Love in
Pride and Prejudice
- Mr and Mrs Bennet
- Mr. Bennet married for Mrs.
Bennet's appearance
- Shows a shallow
character and naivety
- He regrets his
actions but he keeps
the marriage intact
for the sake of his
children
- Does solitary
hobbies to keep his
distance from his
wife (e.g. long walks
and reading)
- He overlooked
her personality
for her looks
- He becomes wary of suitors for
Elizabeth, his favourite daughter.
This is due to his love and worry
for them and perhaphs because
he doesn't want them to regret
their marrriage like he did, and
for them to marry for love and
not for their background.
- He realizes that
physical attraction may
not last and not a good
basis for marriage as
the appeareance would
fade away as time
passes.
- 'Love and all
affection has long
disappeared'
- 'Captivated by youth and beauty'
- Women married for
money and for a home
as they rely on their
husband's income as
they themselves do
not work and earn a
living.
- Mrs. Bennet
- In the beginning, she understood that Mr. Darcy was a very
wealthy man, therefore encouraging his daughters to get a
chance at the ball, but later develops a prejudice for him due to
his refusal for dancing with his daughter and for his insult to
Elizabeth. This shows her inability to understand characters
and personalities, including her daughters (especially Elizabeth)
- Her opinion of
Darcy is always
changing and it
becomes good
again after they
get engaged..
- She cannot understnad how people
can marry for love and her view on
marriage is competely different
compared to Mr. Bennet. She worries
about status and reputation more
than anyone else, but she only
posseses a basic understanding.
- She cannot undestand why Lizzie rejects Mr.
Collins and is angry at her for her refusal
because she wanted her to marry him for the
house. She also wanted to marry all of her
faughters off quickly, almost like a competition.
- She deals with
the situation
childlishly and
refuses to talk
with Elizabeth
for a while.
- She wants any of
her daughters to
marry first before
their neighbour, the
Lucasas, marry 'for
reputation', which is
why she got angry
with Elizabthfor her
refusal.
- Entailment: When
the property is
passed down onto
the next alive male
relative ( on the
father;s side )
- She only values a
marriage if it
brings the family
wealth or a social
status.
- Does not act as a motherly
figure for Elizabeth and their
relationship is distant. Her lack
in understanding for her
daughter makes it unlikely for
her to geive her daughter good
avice on love and marriage,
therefore her opinion is often
ignored by the the family,
excluding Lydia nd Kitty, who
are as immature as their
mother is.
- Mr Bennet is an interlligent,
sarcastic and a self-controlled man,
unlike Mrs. Bennet who likes to
gossip and be the centre of
attention. Their difference in
personalities make it extremely
unlikely for Mr. Bennet to love his
wife.
- Her attention is soley fized
on her daughter's
marriages, where Mr
Bennet spends his time in
the library and is only seen
to advise Lizzie during her
love life with Mr Darcy due
to genuine, fatherly care.
- Elizabeth and Mr. Darcy
- They do not have an
instant attraction in the
beginning, and they hate
each other due to their first
meeting at the ball
- The couple overcomes obstacles that all romantic couples would
experience. They have a period where they misunderstand one
other, but they later resolve the problem, and this brings them
closer together which suggests that they have a romantic
relationship, instead of just an obsession.
- They have worked very hard to
acheive to have their relationship and
they even change their personalities
for one another, which shows that
they care a lot for each other. ( Darcy
and Lizzie both become less prejudice
and loses pride for themselves in
order to understand and forgive one
another)
- They later appreciate the other
person's character as they
don't realize their personalities
at first, and they do as their
relationship develops.
- Elizabeth believes strongly in a
marriage for love (her father
agrees with her) and she does not
see a point in a conventional
marriage, unlike her best friend,
Charlotte Lucas.
- Her mother does not
agree with her view on
marriage.
- A wedding requires "true affection"
- We can tell that their
marriage would be happy due
to their love for each other,
and without obstacles, like a
family fued, unlike Romeo
and Juliet.
- She feels an overwhelming love
for Darcy. When she breaks
down and cries after her
refusal to his proposal due to
her confusion in her own
feelings. This shows signs of
passian for him.
- Mr Darcy
- He is quite self-sacrificial
and would do almost
anything to keep Lizzie
happy.
- He sacrifices his pride and
status when he proposed
to Lizzie.
- People would
expect him to
marry women
who has the same
status as he did,
but he chose to
marry Lizzie for
love.
- At the beginning, he is shown
to be proud of his social status
and he does this by refusing to
dance with women as he looked
down upon them due to their
appearance.
- He has a cold callous character at the
beginning as he looked down on the
Bennets. This makes Lizzie and Mrs.
Bennet dislike him on their first meeting.
He made an opinion without getting to
know the Bennets family -> shows signs
of prejudice.
- "In vain I have struggled. It will not do. My
feelings will not be repressed. You must
allow me to tell you how ardently I admire
and love you." (34.4)
- 'It is universally
accepted, that a single
man in a possesion of a
good fortune, must be in
want of a wife."
- In Lizzie and Darcy's case,
they both have a equal role
in the relationship where
they both want to be with
each other equally as much.
Here, Austen may have used
the couple as an example to
show that the stereotype
for wealthy men in her time
could be broken.
- This quotation is
more of a fact than
an opinion and this
suggests a patriacal
society as well as
objectifying women.
- An unspoken truth
that everyone should
know and accept.
- 'In want'-
this
undervalues
a women
- "must" shows that it is
normal or seen as
compulsory, perhaphs,
for a man to get
married and it places
pressure on men to fufil
the stereotype.
- This quotation suggests that
conventional marriage is more
common than a marriage for
love and it also shows that
people are more prone to have
a conventional marriage.
Furthermore, the possibility of
a love-filled marriage is not
even mentioned.
- Elizabeth and Jane
- They have a sisterly love
and they care more for
each other than the others
in the family
- Jane acts like a
mother for Lizzie,
compared to Mrs.
Bennet and she even
needs to step in when
Lizzie is acting 'mean'
or irrational
- BBC RESOURCES
- Darcy is concerned about his
reputation, but not as much as other
characters believe. He has two faces:
one public, one private. In public,
although he acts with manners and
formality, many believe he's
arrogant and aloof. In Longbourn, his
reputation develops along these
lines. But in private he's loving and
caring. He treats his tenants and
servants well, and ensures Lydia's
reputation is rescued, without
publicising this.
- One of Elizabeth's most attractive qualities is not
being as concerned as others are about someone's
reputation. She won't be intimidated by either Darcy or
Lady Catherine, despite their 'reputations'. She believes
there are more important things. When she finds out
Jane is ill, she thinks nothing of walking three miles
over fields and arriving at Netherfield in a mess -
something most women wouldn't have done. Some
would look down on her for being so unladylike (the
Bingley sisters). However, to Elizabeth, her reputation
is far less important than her sister's welfare