"But he paid her not the smallest attention, till her grandfather's death made her mistress of this fortune."
"No- why should he? If it was not allowable for him to gain my affections, because I had no money, what occasion could there be for making love to a girl whom he did care about and who was equally poor?"
"But there seems indelicacy in directing his attentions toward her, so soon after this event."
"A man in distressed circumstances has not time for all those elegant decorums which other people may observe. If she does not object to it, why should we?"
"Her not objecting does not justify him."
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Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice, ch. 27 pg. 151
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I love it when authors give ironic names to their characters, like Hawthorne's Chillingsworth, or now Austen's Miss King. Here she just got a fortune, and she has power over the Bennets like a ruler, stealing certain people from their company. She is not loved because of any virtue except that of money. Poor girl. She reminds me of other Jane Austen characters or like a Jane Eyer character, poor and rejected by family, but when her family dies, suddenly she has friends.
I have to say I love how Austen makes her heroine so judgmental. I suppose because I am a judger and not a perceiver that I enjoy a character more when we have that in common. It is also nice -going back to Austen's writing style- how she does not say "said Elizabeth... spoke Jane... shouted Lydia... scoffed Mrs. Bennet," but she usually lets you know who is talking by what they say. I wish she had published more books before she died.