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Although many should!!



In his letter to Mr. Bennet, announcing his visit, he apologizes for being next in the entail and his intention to make amends.
When he asks Mrs. Bennet which of her girls did the cooking and she replies that they we well off enough to keep a cook, he begged her pardon and "continued to apologize for about a quarter of an hour."
He apologizes to Mrs. Phillips for his presence when her nieces come to visit and apologizes when they leave.
When Mr. Collins dances with Lizzy, he is "apologizing instead of attending."
When he learns that Mr. Darcy is Lady Catherine's niece, he insists on introducing himself and says that he would have done it sooner and his ignorance of the connection must "plead my apology" and when he goes over to Mr. Darcy, Lizzy sees from his lips the motion of the word "apology."
When Lizzy visits the Collinses, Charlotte takes over the introductions to avoid Mr. Collins' "apologies and thanks" and when they play cards at Rosings, Mr. Collins apologizes for every win.

It's a pity that the virtue of apologizing can lapse into becoming merely irritating. After all, those who refuse to apologise are actually worse human beings!
I wonder who else in Austen should apologise, but never does? Willoughby, yes, indeed, and, of course Wickham (the thought would never occur!) (one of those wretched people that continually think they are 'hard done by' and build their whole life on that premise). Who else I wonder? Mary Crawford probably, she never seems to think ill of herself.



The morality of Darcy's first proposal is iffy, I think. Yes, it would have been more polite not to mention all Lizzie's disadvantages (her vulgar family), but I wonder whether he was wondering whether Lizzie knew how vulgar they were, and so wanted to point it out to her? (!!) In a way he's 'setting out his stand' for her?
In a way, I would say his greater crime was in assuming that Lizzie would 'of course' accept his proposal - simply because he was the very rich Mr D and she was the impecunious Miss B.



That's an interesting observation. I hadn't thought of that.
I don't buy the argument Darcy has Aspergers. He's rude and snobbish plain and simple. His Myers-Briggs personality type is INTJ- he's very rigid. I don't get along with him because we're too much alike LOL! We have the same personality type and we would clash big time. Mr. Darcy's personality type revealed
Lizzie is an ENFJ according to the study. (I participated in the study, taking the test for Mrs. Bates and Frank Churchill).


Fascinating. Never thought of that. Instead, I felt he reacts to her - which is probably part of his charm to millions of female readers - very emotionally... but still, he fights it. I sense that the struggle he mentions is real, between what he feels he owes to his position in society (to choose/chuse someone well-connected and rich) and his inclination - to choose someone who intrigues him.

Uriah Heep? Nobody in Jane Austen, anyway.
Books mentioned in this topic
Pride and Prejudice (other topics)Pride and Prejudice (other topics)
Pride and Prejudice (other topics)
It might not have been an Austen character. But I feel like it was!