How Does Pride Cause Destruction

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How Pride Can Almost Ruin an Engagement:
The Destructive Pride between Elizabeth Bennet and Fitzwilliam Darcy and how the couple destroys their pride in Austen’s Pride and Prejudice

Pride leads to destruction. Pride and prejudice are prevalent in Austen’s novel of the same name, but pride is by far the more detrimental of the two. According to Austen, pride is “our opinion of ourselves” (Austen 9). In the novel, Elizabeth Bennet and Fitzwilliam Darcy are very unlikely to be married because of their respective social classes. Mr. Fitzwilliam Darcy is a part of the upper class. He is a very wealthy young man. Elizabeth is of the lower class. She is the second eldest of five sisters and her family holds an uncertain financial future. This is why Elizabeth and her sisters need to marry into the upper class. Mr. Darcy should marry within his class because he has a reputation to uphold and if he marries a rich woman then he would not bear the financial strain of marring a poor person. Mr. Darcy is prideful of his social position and Elizabeth, Lizzy, is prideful about her ability to understand Mr. Darcy’s disposition. Lizzy and Darcy’s relationship …show more content…

Darcy’s aunt, Lady Catherine de Bourgh. Since Mr. Darcy was a child, his late mother and his aunt arranged Mr. Darcy and Lady Catherine’s daughter, Anne, to be married and for Lady Catherine’s property, Rosings, to be combined with Pemberley. This was the expectation of the time for the rich to marry the rich. Lady Catherine did not know if Mr. Darcy proposed to Elizabeth. Near the end of the novel, Lady Catherine attempts to stop the couple’s engagement. She leaves Rosings to tell Elizabeth reject Mr. Darcy because he is “destined for his cousin” and that that “interest” will not accept her as Mr. Darcy’s wife (172). So Lady Catherine tells Elizabeth that everyone in the entire upper class society will ignore your existence all because you married a rich

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