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Pride And Prejudice Quote Analysis

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Pride And Prejudice Quote Analysis
Jane Austen loved to read. She read epistolary1 novels, which accounts for the 21 letters present in Pride and Prejudice. The narrator in Pride and Prejudice is omniscient, anonymous, and reliable.

Several of the characters in Pride and Prejudice read and write.

Mr. Bennet—reads on page 85, Austen does not present letters to reader. His family knows him as "a most negligent and dilatory correspondent."—page 223. They hoped that he would write from London while he was off searching for Lydia and Wickham, but the only letters that arrived came from Mr. Gardiner.
Quote- "I dislike it very much, but it must be done."

Elizabeth—reads on page 28, 40-41, although she is a frequent writer, Austen does not present letters to reader. Elizabeth
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I am not a great reader, and I have pleasure in many things."—page 27.

Caroline Bingley—reads on page 40-41, letters on pages 22, 90. Caroline writes to be polite. Her letters reveal her as superficial, and expose how ‘polite' is not always honest.
Quote-"Miss Bingley's attention was quite as much engaged in watching Mr. Darcy's progress through his book, as in reading her own; and she was perpetually either making some inquiry, or looking at his page."—page 41

Darcy—reads on page 40-41, letters on pages 150-156, . Darcy is a fairly frequent writer. He writes to his sister, Georgiana, and business letters (many of which we do not hear of), but only once to Elizabeth—a particularly long letter of explanation.
Quote- "They are generally long, but whether always charming, it is not for me to determine." –page 35

Jane—letters on pages 22, 114-115, 206-208, does not read. Jane is a faithful correspondent who writes frequently. Her letters are typically quite long and detailed.

Mr. Gardiner—letters on pages 229, does not read. Mr. Gardiner only writes from London in his search for Lydia and Wickham. His letters are short, to-the-point, and quite detailed, but not revealing any more than what needs to
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Collins—letters on pages 47, 225, does not read. Collins's letters are very verbose, name-dropping, and judgmental, probably not unlike his sermons. He and Lady Catherine DeBourgh are exaggerated caricatures2.

Mr. Bingley—reads on page 40-41, Austen does not present letters to reader. However, we are told by Caroline that "Charles writes in the most careless way imaginable. He leaves out half his words, and blots the rest."—page 35.

Lydia—letter on page 221, does not read. The only letter written by Lydia is to Mrs. Forster, telling her that she has eloped with Wickham. Her letter, not unlike her character, is written in a playful, joking, and thoughtless manner.

1 Epistolary: 1. Carried on by letters; contained in letters. 2. of letters; suitable for writing letters. Ref. epistle: 1. a letter. Epistles are usually long, instructive letters written in formal or elegant language. 2. a literary work, usually in verse, written in the form of a letter. Biblical reference; Epistle: 1. A letter written by one of Christ's Apostles.
In Austen's day, novels were a new ‘art' form. Previously, poetry and the bible were popular reading

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