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Pride And Prejudice Marriage Essay, Research Paper

Pride and Prejudice: Marriage

Essay written by Maria Engstrom

Introduction

For this essay, I chose to read the perhaps most famous book by the English author Jane Austen.

During the reading I was thinking about which theme I should choose to write about and analyze, and

eventually I felt that marriage was the central keyword in the book. I will concentrate on the situation

of the daughters in the family, since these are the best described in the novel. My dealing with

different ideals and problems within a marriage will be illustrated with examples from the text.

Analysis

“Happiness in marriage is entirely a matter of chance. If the dispositions of the parties are ever so

well known to each other, or ever so similar beforehand, it does not advance their felicity in the least.

They always continue to grow sufficiently unlike afterwards to have their share of vexation; and it is

better to know as little as possible of the defects of the person with whom you are to pass your life.”

This is a quote from Charlotte Lucas, one of the female characters in the novel, and a quote which

very well exemplify the general feelings against marriage for the period and the people in upperclass

England.

Marriage is central for all characters in the novel: not just daughters and sons, but parents, aunts,

uncles and everybody else who has some interest in the subject. Though it is of course most in the

interest of the daughter herself to get married, the interests of the own family can be important for the

choice of husband and wife. It is not appropriate for the daughter to choose whoever she likes for her

husband, which she- if she wants a happy marriage- is not very likely to do. I will discuss the reasons

for the careful choice of a proper husband below.

“It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune must be in

want of a wife”

This is the first line in the novel, which clearly shows the connection between money and marriage. It

lies in the interest of a woman to marry a man with a fortune, or at least some good deal of money.

The husband is meant to support his wife, since he is the one with a profession and she is not

(something that will be discussed further down). So, naturally, personal attractions are weighed

against financial considerations. This is why Mrs. Gardiner does not think Wickham a very prudent

man for Elizabeth; because of his want of fortune. Or as Jane says when she hears of Lydia’s

elopement with Wickham: “So imprudent a match on both sides!…my father can give her nothing”.

Since money is so important, Wickham tries to elope with Georgiana Darcy only because of her

fortune of ?30,000 since the property of a woman automatically becomes the property of the husband

in the marriage.

Marriage was therefore a great security for a happy life since there was nothing like the social

security, old age pensions or health insurances we are provided with today.

“If you go on refusing every offer of marriage, you will never get a husband — and I am sure I do not

know who is to maintain you when your father is dead.”

The sentence above is the quoting of Mrs. Bennet to Elizabeth after the refusal of Mr. Collins

proposal. The statement reflects the situation for women in the novel and during this period. No

professions (politics, university-related etc.) were open for women of the genteel classes, so

independence on the woman’s hand almost never occurred. The only “profession” available was that

of being a governess, which meant educating the daughters of a family, but this was a job with low

working conditions and lowly paid. Therefore women had to marry their life into money, happiness and

a secured future (if they did not by chance happened to inherit a large sum of money.) As Charlotte

Lucas thoughts before accepting the proposal of Mr. Collins are pictured in the novel:

“Without thinking highly either of men or of matrimony, marriage had always been her object; it was

the only honourable provision for well-educated young women of small fortune, and however uncertain

of giving happiness, must be their pleasantest preservative from want.”

It was certainly not appropriate that young, unmarried women lived outside the family although she

might be an heiress. Young women were thought of incapable of living their own lives, it seems, so

the daughter stayed within the family til the day she got married and moved to her husband’s estate.

A woman who never got married could therefore expect a life in her parents’ house for the rest of her

life; what was called being a ‘dependant’. Marriage was accordingly the only key to a life outside the

family. The case of an elopement, as with Lydia and Wickham, where the family is leaven without

their permission, is looked upon as something rather radical and misfortunate for the family, for the

reasons given above as well as financial ones in this very case.

When the daughter once had chosen her husband, the connection was a permanent one since

divorces were very uncommon during this period (and misfortunate for the family’s good name, one

can imagine). One way for a husband to divorce his wife would be on grounds of sexual infidelity on

the wife’s hand. This was, however, not an easy path to a divorce. Except from getting the permission

of the Parliament to sue the wife, these different steps costed a good deal of money, which lead to

only the rich being able afford divorces.

Conclusion

Marriage is the main subject in the novel, as well as for people of this period. The maybe most

important condition for a happy marriage is money besides love family relations. The situation of the

women in the novel does not allow them any kind of deviant acting since a happy marriage is the only

goal for them. Though this is the general atmosphere in the novel, I would like to end my essay with

the words of Mr. Bennet to his daughter Elizabeth on her accepting Mr. Darcy’s proposal, which stand

like an anti-thesis of the otherwise general view of the perfect marriage:

“He is rich, to be sure, and you may have more fine clothes and fine carriages than Jane. But will

they make you happy?”

33f


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