Wednesday, September 18, 2019
Escaping the Fog of Pride and Prejudice :: Pride Prejudice Essays
      Escaping the Fog of Pride and Prejudice                 The words of the title of Jane Austen's novel,  Pride and Prejudice,     shroud the main characters, Elizabeth and Darcy in a fog.  The plot of  the novel     focuses on how Elizabeth and Darcy escape the fog and find each other.   Both     characters must individually recognize their faults and purge them.  At  the     beginning of the novel, it seems as if the two will never be able to escape  the     thick fog.  The scene at the Netherfield ball makes the marriage of  Elizabeth     and Darcy much more climactic because the pride and prejudice of both  increases     greatly during the night.                 The Netherfield ball is the first time Darcy  and Elizabeth dance.  When     Darcy asks Elizabeth she is so surprised and confused that she says yes to a  man     who she is determined to hate.  At the Meryton ball she had quickly made  a     sketch of Darcy's character.  Compared to Jane who "never [sees] a fault  in any     body" (11), she doesn't believe only the best in everyone.  She is  usually right     about people.  From simply hearing Mr. Collins' letter, she asks if he  is a     sensible man, which he proves not to be.  She is precisely perceptive  of     everyone except Wikham  and Darcy.                 At the Meryton ball, Darcy is very  reserved.  He refuses to dance with     Elizabeth when Bingley asks him to, saying that Elizabeth is not handsome  enough     to tempt him.  Elizabeth's pride is hurt and she characterizes Darcy  as     disagreeable and proud.  When Elizabeth first meets Wikham, she is  blinded by     her prejudice of Darcy as she accepts everything harmful Wikham has to say  of     Darcy.  The plot of the rest of the book revolves around Elizabeth  discovering     the true nature of both Darcy and Wikham.  At the Netherfield ball, it  seems     this will never happen.  From the beginning of the night, when  Elizabeth     discovers Wikham didn't attend the ball in order to avoid Darcy she "was     resolved against any sort of conversation with him"  (60).  Her  hate of Darcy is     sharpened, yet when he asks her to dance, she accepts in her confusement.                 There is an awkwardness between the two as  they start to dance.  					    
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