Mr Collins Irony

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Irony is a wonderful and underappreciated technique. Author Jane Austen includes a fair amount of irony in her novel, “Pride and Prejudice.” The irony within the story sets the audience up to view certain characters in certain ways. It can be said that the irony Austen uses is just an instrument for moral vision. She uses it to bring out the societal issues that she believes are based on morals and assigns her characters different issues to outline with her ironic statements and remarks. There are many characters who’s personalities were shaped by the irony that Austen used to outline them. Austen sets the whole story off with an ironic statement about marriage. “It is a truth universally acknowledged that a single man in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a wife.” (Austen 1) This statement suggests that, across the universe, a wealthy man, who isn’t already tied down, wants to be married. As the story progresses, the reader notices that the “universally acknowledged truth” isn’t so much a man’s want as it is a woman’s. “’You must know that I am thinking of his marrying one of them.’ ‘Is that his design in settling here?’ ‘Design! Nonsense, how can you talk so! But it is very likely …show more content…

Collins. Mr. Collins had a bit of a twisted view of what it meant to be Christian. “You ought certainly to forgive them as a Christian, but never to admit them in your sight, or allow their names to be mentioned in your hearing” (Austen 312) This idea of how to forgive is more of a “how to shun.” To forgive someone completely is to renew a sense of trust towards them within yourself. If you can’t stand to see them or hear their name, have you really forgiven them? Probably not. This quote makes me thing of the whole, “no judgment” thing. You can’t forgive someone for something, then continue to shun them because of what they had done in the past. The only way to fix a broken relationship is to forgive

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