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Colonel Fitzwilliam

Mr. Darcy who accompanies him on visit to Lady Catherines home. He is a


pleasant and friendly gentleman who shows an interesting Elizabeth, but
then confesses he can only mary someone with large fortune because of his
status as a youngest son.

Mrs. Foster
Wife of Colonel Foster and invites Lydia to accompany them to Brighton.

Colonel Foster
Regiment leader who allows his wife to bring Lydia to Brighton. After the
disastrous elopement.

Miss Younge
Darcys governess back when Wickham seduced the young girl.

Mrs. Lucas
Mrs. Lucas is married to Sir William and is Charlotte and Marias mother.

Mr. Denny
Soldier in the reginments who introduces the bennet girls to Mr. Wickham.

Miss King.
A woman in Meryton, after she inherits a sum of money. Her inheritance
distracts Wickham from flirting Elizabeth.
Mrs. Jenkinson
Mrs. Jenkinson Miss de Boughs associate. She helps the young girl.

Mrs. Reynolds
She gives Elizabeth and the Gardiners a tour of pemberley and impresses
Elizabeth with her praise of Darcy.

Mrs. Annesley
She shows great civility toward Elizabeth and Mrs. Gardener when they visit,
even through Bingley sisters are rude to them.

III. Settings
Netherfield Park
This place when Elizabeth and MR. Darcy have interact the most. This setting
when Mr. Darcy was saying his feeling and attraction to Elizabeth or also
known as Lizzy or Liza. But Elizabeth was perceives Mr. Darcy as a prideful a
prejudiced feeling she decided is justified when she sees him at the estate at
Rossing Park. And this setting see also when its sold to Mr. Bingley .And there
are may dinner meeting was do to this setting for example the dinner or ball
to introduce Mr. Bingley to the 5 daughter of Mister and Missis Bennet and
the Bennet wants Mr. Bingley to marry her one daughter. In this setting we
see Mr, Bingley and Jane the oldest Bennet sister have a mutual
understanding and goes to falling inloved to each other. We can see that
there are a posibiities that one of Mister and Missis bennets daughters wants
Mr. Bingley.
Rossing Park
We first hear of Rossing when Mr. Collins comes to visit the Bennets. For Mr.
Collins, nothing can compare to Rossings in its grandeur. If he does compare
anything to Rosings, then he is giving that place a great compliment, When
Elizabeth visits Rosings she recognizes the grandeur of the estate, yet she is
but slightly affected by Mr. Collins. For many visits Rossings it does inspire
yet it is the feeling af what makes you feel inferior. When Sir William visits he
was so completely wonder by the grandeur surrounding him. The setting is
when Mrs. Gardener told Elizabeth about her honest feeling about Wickham.
Because Elizabeth is so insensible girl to know that and she wants to know it
also of Mr. Wickham. And it also tackles Mr. Darcy left would be back after
ten days. Mr. Bingley came often to the Bennet.

Pemberley
Elizabeth visit Pemberley. Mr. Darcys estate. At first sight of Pemberley,
Elizabeths spirit was in full of excitement. She wondered by the
magnificence and beauty of Pemberley. Yet she also feels that is natural, that
it isnt proud. This settings reminiscing the whole setting of Netherfield Park
because that is the first see of each other and they misinterpreted they
doing they misjudged their attitude because Mr. Darcy is Rich have power
and wealth also. And reconciled each other and have a long conversation a
talks about their romantic relationship before. Why it is so bitter and now,
they know them well so they cannot misjudge them know. And they talked it.

IV. Synopsis
Pride and Prejudice was published 1813. Pride means a feeling that you
respect yourself and deserved to be respected by other people. And
Prejudice means preconceived opinion that is not based on reason or actual
experience. It was heart-felting novel. Why? Because after all the
misinterpretation and misjudged they still managed to know them better.
Because its a crazy have many different characters. Because of the
misjudgement and wrong interpretation. It lead it to be the one of the
conflict or the main problem of the novel.

The news that a wealthy young gentleman named Charles Bingley has
owned the manor of Netherfield Park causes a great stir in the nearby village
of Longbourn, especially in the bennet household, The bonnets have five
unmarried daughters from the youngest to oldest first is Lydia, Kitty ,Mary,
Elizabeth, Jane and Mrs Bennet is desperate tosee them all married. After Mr.
Bennet pays social visit to Mr. Bingley, The Bennets attend a ball at which Mr.
Bingley is present. He is taken with Jane and spends much of the evening
dancing with her. His close friend, Mr. Darcy, is less pleased with the evening
and haughtily refuses to dance with Elizabeth, which makes everyone view
him as arrogant and obnoxious. At social functions over subsequent weeks,
however, Mr. Darcy finds himself increasingly attracted to Elizabeths charm
and intelligence. Janes friendship with Mr. Bingley also continues to burgeon,
and Jane pays a visit to Bingleys mansion

When Elizabeth and Jane return home, they find Mr. Collins visiting
their household. Mr. Collins is a young clergyman who stands to inherit Mr.
Bennets property, which has been entailed, meaning that it can only be
passed down to male heirs. Mr. Collins is a pompous fool, through he is quite
enthralled by the Bennet girls. Shortly after his arrival, he makes a proposal
of marriage to Elizabeth. She turns him down, wounding his pride.
Meanwhile the bennet girls have become from militia officers stationed in
nearby town. Among them Wickham, a handsome young soldier who is
friendly toward Elizabeth and tells her how Darcy cruelly cheated him.

V. 10 Difficult words
Loo - A card game in which forfeits are paid into a pool.
Ex. Sorry I was in the Loo.
Awed filled with wonder,admiration and respect.
Ex. He felt awed.
Wit clever expression that awakens amusement and pleasure.
Ex. Goodluck wit that.
Aloofness Physicallyor emotionally distant, unfriendness.
Ex. Power of alert aloofness.
Ardent - having intense feelings.
Ex. It was his ardent.

Extravagant - spending money excessively or immoderately.


Ex. She was extravagant.
Rectory a priests house, parsonage
Ex. Back to the rectory.
Mingled joined or took parts from others.
Ex. My tears mingled with her.
Shruberry - a place where number of shrubs are planted.
Ex. Where we see shrubbery?
Lush Plentiful, extremely pleasing to the senses
Ex. In the lush.

VI. Symbols
is remarkably free of explicit symbolism, which perhaps has something
to do with the novels reliance on dialogue over description. Nevertheless,
Pemberley, Darcys estate, sits at the center of the novel, literally and
figuratively, as a geographic symbol of the man who owns it. Elizabeth visits
it at a time when her feelings toward Darcy are beginning to warm; she is
enchanted by its beauty and charm, and by the picturesque countryside, just
as she will be charmed, increasingly, by the gifts of its owner. Austen makes
the connection explicit when she describes the stream that flows beside the
mansion. In front, she writes, a stream of some natural importance was
swelled into greater, but without any artificial appearance. Darcy possesses
a natural importance that is swelled by his arrogance, but which coexists
with a genuine honesty and lack of artificial appearance. Like the stream,
he is neither formal, nor falsely adorned. Pemberley even offers a symbol-
within-a-symbol for their budding romance: when Elizabeth encounters Darcy
on the estate, she is crossing a small bridge, suggesting the broad gulf of
misunderstanding and class prejudice that lies between themand the
bridge that their love will build across it.
VII. Themes
Contains one of the most cherished love stories in English literature:
the courtship between Darcy and Elizabeth As in any good love story, the
lovers must elude and overcome numerous stumbling blocks, beginning with
the tensions caused by the lovers own personal qualities. Elizabeths pride
makes her misjudge Darcy on the basis of a poor first impression, while
Darcys prejudice against Elizabeths poor social standing blinds him,
for a time, to her many virtues. Austen, meanwhile, poses countless
smaller obstacles to the realization of the

love between Elizabeth and Darcy, including Lady Catherines attempt to


control her nephew, Miss Bingleys snobbery. In each case, anxieties about
social connections, or the desire for better social connections, interfere with
the workings of love. Darcy and Elizabeths realization of a mutual and
tender love seems to imply that Austen views love as something
independent of these social forces, as something that can be captured if only
an individual is able to escape the warping effects of hierarchical society.
notes about love, using the character of Charlotte Lucas, who marries the
buffoon Mr. Collins for his money, to demonstrate that the heart does not
always dictate marriage. Yet with her central characters, Austen suggests
that true love is a force separate from society and one that can conquer even
the most difficult of circumstances.

VIII. Moral
Lesson/Value
The Moral lesson is dont judged other people by his or her power or
his her rich or poor just know him or her before to judge him and dont reject
what love give to you of other people. Because you don; know how much
they sacrifice for it and the pain that they gfet each every reject you give to
them dont be bastard to say it badly say it good to not offend others. Give
them a chance to love you because you dont know if that is the last person
you love you the most.
IX. Comments
Dont use deep words and minimize many characters to read it easily
use easily read and understand words to easily learn the readers and helped
them to motivated them to dont stop loving.

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