Jane Austen: Six Novels and Their Methods |
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Page 22
... fact that he is the dupe of John Thorpe . Even Mrs Allen is not always merely the ' null version of the chaperone ' : it is clear that she in no way fits the Gothic requirements of her role , and it is as clear that she cannot properly ...
... fact that he is the dupe of John Thorpe . Even Mrs Allen is not always merely the ' null version of the chaperone ' : it is clear that she in no way fits the Gothic requirements of her role , and it is as clear that she cannot properly ...
Page 23
... fact that Catherine is , on this occasion at least , entirely unresponsive to literary parallels , whether ... fact that Catherine and Isabella read novels , and an account of their pleasure in reading The Mysteries of Udolpho , and it ...
... fact that Catherine is , on this occasion at least , entirely unresponsive to literary parallels , whether ... fact that Catherine and Isabella read novels , and an account of their pleasure in reading The Mysteries of Udolpho , and it ...
Page 106
... fact of economic life in a large city : money can do ' every thing ' , because , in a real sense , only money can do anything . Her mercenary principles are , in general , the same as those advo- cated by Sir Thomas Bertram until the ...
... fact of economic life in a large city : money can do ' every thing ' , because , in a real sense , only money can do anything . Her mercenary principles are , in general , the same as those advo- cated by Sir Thomas Bertram until the ...
Contents
Ideas and Arguments | 31 |
Informal Arguments | 53 |
Compromises | 81 |
Copyright | |
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actually Anne Anne's argues argument attempts Austen's novels become Bennet Bingley Box Hill chapter character Charlotte claims complete concept contrast course critics Darcy Darcy's Dashwood defence Donwell doubts Edmund Edward Elinor Elizabeth Elizabeth Bennet Elliot Elton Emma Emma's emotional Evangelicals example existence fact Fanny Fanny's feelings fiction Frank Churchill function gentry Gothic Gothic novel happy Harriet Henry heroine Highbury ideas imagination insists interesting irony Jane Austen judgement kind Knightley least less letter literary London Mansfield Park Marianne Marianne's marriage Mary means merely mind moral Musgrove Mysteries of Udolpho narrator nature never Northanger Abbey novelist obvious occasion offers once parody perceive perhaps Persuasion Portsmouth possibilities Pride and Prejudice principle question reader reading revealed seems Sense and Sensibility significant Sir Thomas Sir Walter sisters six novels story suggest takes taste thing thinking tion Tony Tanner understanding Wentworth Wickham Willoughby