Search for notes by fellow students, in your own course and all over the country.
Browse our notes for titles which look like what you need, you can preview any of the notes via a sample of the contents. After you're happy these are the notes you're after simply pop them into your shopping cart.
Title: Pride and Prejudice- Marriage
Description: An in-depth analysis of the quotes you need to write an A* essay on the theme of marriage in Pride and Prejudice. It explores all the key relationships. I created these notes and gained an A* with them in my Eng. Lit. GCSE in Summer 2017 under the new syllabus.
Description: An in-depth analysis of the quotes you need to write an A* essay on the theme of marriage in Pride and Prejudice. It explores all the key relationships. I created these notes and gained an A* with them in my Eng. Lit. GCSE in Summer 2017 under the new syllabus.
Document Preview
Extracts from the notes are below, to see the PDF you'll receive please use the links above
Wickham and Lydia’s marriage is a parallel to that of the Bennet’s
...
Mr Collins wants to marry because Lady C has told him he must, he does
available
...
Mr Collins further reflects his pragmatic
virtue’
...
approach to marriage during his proposal to Elizabeth when he lists his reasons for
for independence and Wickham’s
Austen presents their marriage as doomed to fail, as like Mrs Bennet,
appearance, Wickham is lured to
Lydia’s looks will not last for ever, and Lydia will soon see Wickham for
marry her by the money Darcy offers
what he truly is
...
marriage very ordered starting with the fact he needs a wife as a clergyman
...
he was paid to by Darcy
...
marriage is further shown by her declaring
Both have too grave faults, for the
‘love in marriage is merely a matter of
marriage to work so therefore it’s
doomed to fail
...
Austen uses her as a vehicle to
express the perilous position upper-middle
class women were in if they did not marry as
Mr Bennet is presented negatively by
Austin as an uncaring and inattentive
husband
...
The Bennets’ marital home is
Longbourn, which when split into long
This is interesting as Austen herself did not
Marriage
and bourn, reflects the nature of the
marry, and relied on her brothers to support
Bennet’s marriage
...
’ Whilst Mr Bennet made a
bad decision regarding his marriage,
Bennets’ Marriage
Austen shows he still should be a good
husband and care for his family, because
Elizabeth and Darcy’s Marriage
marry even if only for a comfortable living
...
As a younger
Elizabeth and Darcy’s relationship develops and grows
throughout the novel
...
inheritance, therefore he must make a
care about the other enough to want to change, and they both
prudent match to ensure his financial
gain qualities from each other that they were previously
Mr Bennet is described as being attracted to Mrs Bennet because
future
...
Darcy loses his pride and snobbery ‘he has no
of her ‘appearance of good humour’, thus he married her on what
care of which match they make
...
Throughout the novel, Austen seeks
Lizzy and Darcy are intellectual
to display that first impressions are rarely correct, such as in the
equals, ‘a woman may take liberties and its parallel, Jane and Bingley’s, is shown to be the ideal,
with her husband’
...
Their marriage
hence the original title of the novel ,’First Impressions’, mirroring the
marriage of the Regency era,
thing in a marriage
...
When the ‘appearance’
Elizabeth and Darcy have equal
amiable’, showing the intensity of love between them
...
Mr Bennet actually warns Lizzy not to make
has a solid foundation of true love
Title: Pride and Prejudice- Marriage
Description: An in-depth analysis of the quotes you need to write an A* essay on the theme of marriage in Pride and Prejudice. It explores all the key relationships. I created these notes and gained an A* with them in my Eng. Lit. GCSE in Summer 2017 under the new syllabus.
Description: An in-depth analysis of the quotes you need to write an A* essay on the theme of marriage in Pride and Prejudice. It explores all the key relationships. I created these notes and gained an A* with them in my Eng. Lit. GCSE in Summer 2017 under the new syllabus.