【英语论文】关于《傲慢与偏见》中真爱的探讨True Love Revealed in Pride and Prejudice.doc
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1、关于之真爱的探讨Austens apparent reticence in matters of contemporary politics has often provoked comment from critics. For most of her adult life, Britain was at war with France and experiencing casualties on an unprecedented scale. Her brothers, Frank and Charles, served in the Royal Navy, in careers that
2、 brought not only wealth and honour, but also constant danger. It is evident from comments in Austens surviving letters that she was far from ignorant of the international conflict; many readers have therefore pondered over the relative absence of reference to current affairs in her fiction. The que
3、stion is particularly acute in Pride and Prejudice, at once the most military and the most witty and effervescent of all the novels. Here the militia are embodied in force, and yet the regiment billeted at meryton seems designed to provide dancing partners for the local community, rather than protec
4、tion against a foreign foe. It is hard to imagine Mr Wickham, Chamberlayne or Denny engaged in action other than in the ballroom or at the card table. When seen in the light of contemporary history, however, the anxiety generated by the militia takes on further dimensions. By 1813, when Pride and Pr
5、ejudice was published, the British army was twenty times larger than it had been at the outbreak of the war. When the character of Mrs Bennet had been sketched out in the 1790s, her ambition of getting her daughters married off had probably seemed a relatively straightforward device to a young write
6、r nurtured on eighteenth-century drama and comic novels. 15 years later, British women had endured the deep distresses brought on by prolonged hostilities- fear of food shortages, terror at the thought of military invasion, and, worst of all, the experience of losing sons, husbands, fathers, brother
7、s, and friends in the conflict. The sensitivity of Mrs Bennets nerves begings to seem more comprehensible when the collective anxiety to which she has been subjected for so many years is taken into account, while her matrimonial obsessions acquire an altogether darker tone. As the death toll rose in
8、 successive campaigns against France, the numbers of eligible Englishmen were inevitably declining. If the political economist, the Revd Thomas Malthus, articulated widespread anxieties about the British population exceeding the nations agricultural output, Mrs Bennet expresses a peculiarly feminie
9、nightmare relating to the increasingly inadequate supply of husbands.Jane Austen was a major English novelist, whose brilliantly witty, elegantly structured satirical fiction marks the transition in English literature from 18th century neo-classicism to 19th century romanticism. Jane Austen was born
10、 on 16 December, 1775, at the rectory in the village of Steventon, near Basingstoke, in Hampshire. The seventh of eight children of the Reverend George Austen and his wife, Cassandra, she was educated mainly at home and never lived apart from her family. She had a happy childhood amongst all her bro
11、thers and the other boys who lodged with the family and whom Mr Austen tutored. From her older sister, Cassandra, she was inseparable. To amuse themselves, the children wrote and performed plays and charades, and even as a little girl Jane was encouraged to write. The reading that she did of the boo
12、ks in her fathers extensive library provided material for the short satirical sketches she wrote as a girl. At the age of 14 she wrote her first novel, Love and Freindship (sic) and then A History of England by a partial, prejudiced and ignorant Historian, together with other very amusing juvenilia.
13、 In her early twenties Jane Austen wrote the novels that were later to be re-worked and published as Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice and Northanger Abbey. She also began a novel called The Watsons which was never completed. As a young woman Jane enjoyed dancing (an activity which features
14、 frequently in her novels) and she attended balls in many of the great houses of the neighbourhood. She loved the country, enjoyed long country walks, and had many Hampshire friends. It therefore came as a considerable shock when her parents suddenly announced in 1801 that the family would be moving
15、 away to Bath. Mr Austen gave the Steventon living to his son James and retired to Bath with his wife and two daughters. The next four years were difficult ones for Jane Austen. She disliked the confines of a busy town and missed her Steventon life. After her fathers death in 1805, his widow and dau
16、ghters also suffered financial difficulties and were forced to rely on the charity of the Austen sons. It was also at this time that, while on holiday in the West country, Jane fell in love, and when the young man died, she was deeply upset. Later she accepted a proposal of marriage from Harris Bigg
17、-Wither, a wealthy landowner and brother to some of her closest friends, but she changed her mind the next morning and was greatly upset by the whole episode. After the death of Mr Austen, the Austen ladies moved to Southampton to share the home of Janes naval brother Frank and his wife Mary. There
18、were occasional visits to London, where Jane stayed with her favourite brother Henry, at that time a prosperous banker, and where she enjoyed visits to the theatre and art exhibitions. However, she wrote little in Bath and nothing at all in Southampton. Then, in July, 1809, on her brother Edward off
19、ering his mother and sisters a permanent home on his Chawton estate, the Austen ladies moved back to their beloved Hampshire countryside. It was a small but comfortable house, with a pretty garden, and most importantly it provided the settled home which Jane Austen needed in order to write. In the s
20、even and a half years that she lived in this house, she revised Sense and Sensibility and Pride and Prejudice and published them ( in 1811 and 1813) and then embarked on a period of intense productivity. Mansfield Park came out in 1814, followed by Emma in 1816 and she completed Persuasion (which wa
21、s published together with Northanger Abbey in 1818, the year after her death). None of the books published in her life-time had her name on them they were described as being written By a Lady. In the winter of 1816 she started Sanditon, but illness prevented its completion. Jane Austen had contracte
22、d Addisons Disease, a tubercular disease of the kidneys (see Jane Austens Illness by Sir Zachary Cope, British Medical Journal, 18 July 1964 and Australian Addisons Disease Assoc.). No longer able to walk far, she used to drive out in a little donkey carriage which can still be seen at the Jane Aust
23、en Museum at Chawton. By May 1817 she was so ill that she and Cassandra, to be near Janes physician, rented rooms in Winchester. Tragically, there was then no cure and Jane Austen died in her sisters arms in the early hours of 18 July, 1817. She was 41 years old. She is buried in Winchester Cathedra
24、l.Pride and Prejudice Pride and prejudice are displayed in every character pertaining to the novel in some form or another. It is pride of those of a higher economic status which genuinely withholds prominent relationships of those who are of lower economic status. Darcys pride causes him to look do
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