In this passage, it is clear how Mrs. Bennet feels about marriage. It reinstates the main thesis of the novel, as the first passage says "It is a truth universally acknowledge that a man in possession of good fortune must be in want of a wife," which is exactly what Mrs. Bennet thinks. The entire novel is based on the marriage of Jane to Mr. Bingley and Elizabeth to Mr. Darcy as well as Lydia to Wickham. Mrs. Bennet puts pressure and emphasis on marriage as something extremely important …show more content…
Living in an upper class society you had no choice than to marry a man quick and inherit their wealth and status. As we see in Pride and Prejudice Lizzy was the divergent character who wanted to marry only if she was happy unlike her sisters who married in order to inherit wealth and status and leave their mothers house. This impacted me as a reader because time is changing. In the olden day’s girls had to marry a man with wealth and status and leave their parents house whether they were happy or not but now girls can marry who they want, when they want and if they want too. If a girl was to marry a man for their wealth and status now they would be called a gold digger. Goes to show how society is changing as days are going by. Pride and Prejudice was an amazing book that taught me a lot about upper class and lower class citizens and how girls have it