Hypocrisy In The Importance Of Being Earnest

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“The Not So Earnest” In Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest, multiple methods are used to express the hypocrisy and sentimentality in London’s Victorian values. These approaches focus primarily on courtship, marriage, virtuous rules, and societal class. During this era, everyone has the goal of marriage. Courtship is short and espousal is long. Everyone is desperate to marry; it is like a race. Wilde gives multiple examples of this, such as the relationship between Gwendolyn and Jack as well as the one between Algy and Cecily. Gwendolyn and Jack have not courted or expressed the idea to Lady Brackell and decide to just be engaged. Cecily and Algy, their situation slightly more severe, have known each other less than a month and decide they are madly in love and will also marry. They too have yet to inform Lady Bracknell. Cecily is convinced that this is the man she has wrote about in her diary, and that she has known him for more than he knows. She believes she has been in love with him for a long while. Algy sees the beauty Cecily possesses and quickly agrees to the engagement. …show more content…

Lady Bracknell will not allow Gwendolyn to marry Jack unless Jack proves that he is wealthy and is well known in society. The same goes for Cecily and Algernon. She does not want Algy marrying Cecily in the beginning. When she realizes that Cecily will be inheriting part of a fortune she then begins encouraging the marriage. What is humorous is the hypocrisy Lady Bracknell is portraying. She is judging this man and woman based on wealth and societal position, but Lady Bracknell was not wealthy to begin with. She married into wealth. She also makes the statement that she doesn’t approve of “mercenary marriages.” So this woman actions proves her to be a hypocrite, as most people were who were aristocratic in this

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