Austen’s treatment of satirical elements in Pride and Prejudice.
Comment
on Austen’s treatment of satirical elements in Pride and Prejudice.
Ans: One
of the most prominent features of the literary style of Jane Austen is her
frequent use of satirical elements. In fact, in no other book is her use of satirical
elements more pronounced than in Pride and Prejudice. In Pride
and Prejudice, Jane Austen employs a variety of satirical elements,
verbal, thematic, situational, and dramatic.
The title of the
novel contains a hidden strain of thematic satirical elements. Jane Austen subtly introduces an inversion in
the thematic foibles, ‘Pride’ and ‘Prejudice’ and the characters they belong
to. It is Darcy who is supposed to have the pride and Elizabeth who is supposed
to have the prejudice.
Verbal satirical
elements are present in profusion in Pride and Prejudice. The
oft-quoted opening sentence of the novel is one of the finest examples of
verbal satirical elements:
“It is truth universally acknowledged
that a single man in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a wife”.
The statement in fact encapsulates the
ambitions of the empty headed Mrs. Bennet, and her desire to find a good match
for each of her five daughters. Sometimes the characters are unconsciously
ironic, as Mrs. Bennet and Mr. Collins. Mr. Bennet and Elizabeth serve to
directly express the author's ironic opinion. Elizabeth is to some extent
similar to her father’s cynicism. At the second ball, not only does she reject
Darcy’s request to dance with her, but also mocks him with comments like “Mr. Darcy is all politeness”, and “I am perfectly convinced by it that Mr.
Darcy has no defect”. Her speeches
crackle with satirical elements that are filled with pep and display vibrant
humor.
Dramatic satirical
elements are at work when the audience knows something that the character
doesn’t, is seen mainly through Elizabeth and Darcy. Elizabeth is critical of
Jane’s blindness to others’ faults. This
criticism is filled with satirical elements, because Elizabeth herself is blind
to the true character of Darcy because of her prejudice against him. Also,
Darcy was blind to his love when he declines to dance with Elizabeth. In
addition, when the Gardiners are talking about a future mistress of Pemberley,
they don’t know that Darcy had proposed to Elizabeth and that she could have
been that mistress now. This gives a clear example of dramatic satirical
elements.
The focal point
of the story’s situational satirical elements is Darcy’s falling in love with
Elizabeth. Mr.Darcy, who once called Elizabeth “tolerable; but not handsome enough to tempt (him)”, gets
captivated by her fine countenance, and ends up admitting that:
“… it is many months since I have
considered [Elizabeth] as one of the handsomest women of my acquaintance.”
Likewise, Elizabeth, who starts out
hating Mr. Darcy with a passion, ends up marrying him. There is a fine streak of satirical elements
in her response to Charlotte’s engagement and her own subsequent leniency
towards materialism at the first sight of Pemberley: “To be mistress of Pemberley might be something!" Elizabeth
tells Mr. Collins that she is not the type of a woman to reject the first
proposal and accept the second but does exactly this when Darcy proposes her
second time.
Satirical
elements in character are even more prominent than satirical elements of
situation. It is ironical that Elizabeth who prides herself on her perception
and disdains Jane’s blindness to realities, is herself blinded by her own
prejudice. Darcy always thought himself to be a gentleman but his own proposal
to Elizabeth is quite ungentlemanly. Wickham is graceful to look at, but at
heart he is an unredeemed villain. The Bingley Sisters hate the Bennets for
their vulgarity but are themselves vulgar in their behaviour. Lady Catherine de
Bourgh views herself to be a graceful lady, but is an equally self-conceited
and haughty woman. Mr. Collins always boasts of himself as a clergyman, but is
an ironical portrait of self-satisfied sycophancy and pomposity. Thus, the
novel abounds in satirical elements of characters.
To conclude, the satirical
elements of Jane Austin are not tinged with any bitterness, nor does she
reflect her cynicism. Rather her satirical elements can be termed comic. Satirical
elements are used by Jane Austin in Pride and Prejudice to expose
the hypocrisy and pretentiousness of contemporary English society.
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