Tuesday, May 24, 2016

Miss King

     "She is a very good kind of girl, I believe. I know no harm of her."
     "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.

Monday, May 16, 2016

Oh Noble Fredrick, How I Hate You

   Frederick turned round, right facing the lamp, where the gas darted up in vivid anticipation of the train. A man in the dress of a railway porter started forward; a bad-looking man, who seemed to have drunk himself into a state of brutality, although his senses were in perfect order.
   "By your leave, miss!" said he, pushing Margaret rudely on one side, and seizing Frederick by the collar.
   "Your name is Hale, I believe?"
   In an instant- Margaret did not see, for everything danced before her eyes - but by some sleight wrestling, Fredrick had tripped him up, and he fell from the height of three or four feet, which the platform was elevated above the space of soft ground, by the side of the railroad. There he lay.
   "Run, run!" gasped Margaret.

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 Elizabeth Gaskell's North and South, ch. 32 pg. 259
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     Elizabeth Gaskell just makes me love books. Her descriptions are perfect in every way, from the personified gas to the excitement of death messing up life. She has the perfect balance of dialog with description and her adjectives are always so colorful and imaginative, with scenes dancing in character's heads.
    She makes her characters round in strange ways, like Fredrick. He is complex even though he is only in the book for a short period. He is talked about by others nearly longer than he is present with Margaret. I love him because he's Margaret's brother, and she loves him, but oh how I hate how the disconnect between them abuses Margaret. Her mother never loved her because of Fredrick. Her maid is better friends with her mother than she is because of Fredrick. She has never been free to travel and her family has never been a full family because of Fredrick. Yet Fredrick is a noble character who stood for what was right and will never stop reaping the consequences for it. You pity him, the innocent, noble causer of so much pain to the heroine. Before he is in the book, he separates Margaret from her parents, because they feel they must keep secrets from her to keep Fredrick safe which then makes them more reserved toward Margaret altogether. While he is staying with Margaret, his presence forced Margaret to push away Thornton and breaks her lover's heart, and even after her brother has left, she has to deal with the murder he committed and the other burdens his coming left on her. What a beautiful, sick mess. I love Elizabeth Gaskell.