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Language In Clarissa, Evelina And Pride And Prejudice

Language In Clarissa, Evelina And Pride And Prejudice

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her, "Upon my word, I say no more here than I might say<br />

in any house in the neighborhood, except Netherfield . .<br />

. You will not find [Darcy] more favourably spoken of by<br />

any one" (67). Although Wickham has not lied, he has<br />

given the impression that his inheritance from the elder<br />

Mr. Darcy has been held up by Fitzwilliam Darcy for no<br />

good reason other than Darcyfs bad temper and spite,<br />

traits Wickham magnanimously decides to overlook, making<br />

himself out to be the better bred, the better man, of the<br />

two.<br />

Elizabeth is drawn into his "problem." Her own<br />

family situation seems so similar. Collins is the<br />

rightful heir to Longbourn, while she and her sisters<br />

will be on the streets without inheritance or home<br />

because they were born girls. Mrs. Bennetf s constant<br />

railing about the unfair consequences the entail has on<br />

their ability to marry well has left all the girls with a<br />

deep dissatisfaction for strict settlement inheritance<br />

practices. Wickham is able to manipulate Elizabethf s<br />

emotions through his skilled use of language and<br />

manipulation of the facts regarding the Darcy<br />

inheritance.<br />

Darcy, Collins, and Bingley are described in terms<br />

of their wealth, yet Austen describes Wickham in terms of

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