To What Extent Did Elizabeth Bennet Make The Right Choices

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Jane Austen’s novel, Pride and Prejudice, opened with the statement: “It is a truth universally acknowledged that a single man in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a wife.” Women during this time could have also had the same thing said about them, only reversed. Women during this time, especially the poor to middle class, tried to marry men of greater fortune. This is part if the reason why Jane and Elizabeth Bennet made the right marital choices in the book. The sisters made the right choices for these reasons; as mentioned earlier, they rose above there stations in society, they also genuinely loved their husbands, and they both made their parents very proud, especially their mother. The first reason that the sisters made the right choices was that they both rose above their original stations in society. Darcy was considered very well off. He had a huge estate and a huge income. Bingley was considered wealthy as well, but his family was not …show more content…
This fact was especially true for Mrs. Bennet, who only cared about her daughters getting married. Mrs. Bennet long expected that Jane would marry Bingley, but when Darcy and Elizabeth got engaged, she was thoroughly surprised. No one in the Bennet family originally liked Darcy for anything but his fortune, and this took a very swift turn after he proposed to Elizabeth, and Mrs. Bennet decided very quickly that she liked him because his fortune was now her daughter’s also. Now, some people say that Jane and Elizabeth actually made the wrong marital choices. People might say that Jane should not have married Bingley because he abandoned her after one person discouraged him of her feelings for him. This argument is invalid because the person that told him that she did not return his feelings was a long trusted friend that Bingley believed to only be protecting