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TheBob
instead of family in his home, but also allows himself to be talked out of giving them three thousand pounds. “Mrs. John Dashwood did not at all approve of what her husband intended to do for his sisters. To take three thousand pounds of their dear little boy” (Sense 6). As in an Austen novel, social life today contains oblique snubs and shows of politeness (OPED). “Her [Marianne] love breaks the pattern of politeness, and we progress to a yet more advanced level of complication” (Bloom 51).
Austen’s view on hypocrisy is also portrayed through Mansfield Park, which she started in 1811 and finished in 1814 (Tomalin 223). It begins explaining how Fanny Price got into the hands of the Bertram’s. The story revolves around Fanny Price. She comes from a poor family because her mother, Lady Bertram, married below her status. She moves in with Sir Thomas and Lady Bertram, her aunt and uncle. “Her aunt, Lady Bertram, is virtually an imbecile; she may be a comic character, and not ill-tempered, but the effects of her extreme placidity are not comic” (Tomalin 228). When Fanny first arrives she is young and innocent. “The little visitor meanwhile was as unhappy as possible. Afraid of everybody, ashamed of herself, and longing for the home she had left” (Mansfield 12). The Bertram’s have four kids, the shallow sisters; Maria and Julia, Tom who is known to be a drunk, and Edmund, who becomes a clergyman. Fanny grows up living with the Bertram’s. Sir Thomas had to leave one day for a business trip. While he was gone, two new people show up, Henry and Mary Crawford. “The village received an addition in the brother and sister of Mrs. Grant, a Mr. and Miss Crawford, the children of her mother by a second marriage”(Mansfield 36). Henry is a big flirt who immediately begins to attempt to seduce Maria upon arrival, even though he knows she is an engaged woman. Secondly, he begins to flirt with Julia also, when he deems it to be necessary.
Mary on the other hand, places her interests first in Tom, but realizes that he is a bit dull. She becomes attracted to Edmund but loses interest in him also when she discovers that he is a clergyman. “A clergyman has nothing to do but to be slovenly and selfish-read the newspaper, watch the weather, and quarrel with his wife” (Mansfield 97). Hypocrisy of this is that Mary can not afford to marry a clergyman, because of his social standing and money reasons and also because it is an uninteresting profession (Bloom 132). “A large income is the best recipe for happiness I ever heard of. It certainly may secure all the myrtle and turkey part of it” (Mansfield 184).Among the chaos, Fanny falls for Edmund, but what she does not know is that Edmund confides in her his interest for Mary. In the end, Tom almost dies, Henry and Maria marry and break it off, Julia marries Tom’s friend and Fanny and Edmund eventually marry.
The hypocrisy in Mansfield Park happens when Mary and Henry Crawford enter the picture. Because of them, Mansfield Park is filled with adultery, betrayal, social ruin and ruptured friendships. “The indignities of stupidity, and the disappointments of selfish passion, can excite little pity” (Mansfield 403). Money is also part of it all. They look for love, but usually with love comes money.
“Her complacent belief that beauty deserves money derives from her own success as a good-looking girl who made a better marriage than was expected, and the only advice she offers Fanny in eight years is “that it is every young woman’s duty to accept such a very unexceptionable offer” as the proposal of marriage made by a man that Fanny dislikes” (Tomalin 228).
In Jane Austen’s novels, the more well read the characters are the better they are informed, but if the characters are the kind of people who read things uncritically and the wrong books, they tend to embarrass themselves in front of others. With this Mary Crawford is the kind who does not look beyond the exterior of things, like Edmund being a clergyman.
Mansfield Park is not just about ones social standings. It is about more than social status, it is about what one feels inside verses how the person was raised, which determines the character.
“There is no clearer statement un Austen’s fiction, I think, of the relationship of “principles” and “conduct,” of the ideal social function of the professions along with a recognition of the frequent actual failure of mortals to live up to those ideals, and of the inseparability of the moral and social institutions of the community”(Bloom 135).
But out of all Jane Austen’s novels, Mansfield Park is the one that points out social status the most.
Jane Austen wrote Mansfield Park when a lot of events were going on. The year she started the novel she had met Emmanuel Louis d’Antraigues. He was a spy for the English and Russian governments, who was then in trouble. That same year that she met him, he and his wife, Anna Saint-Huberty, were both murdered by their manservant. Also during that year the Prime Minister was shot dead. Other events that happened was the appointing of the Prince Regent (Tomalin 224). A lot happened that inspired Austen to write this novel. “Mansfield Park is, among other things, a novel about the condition of England, and addresses itself to the questions raised by royal behavior and the kind of society it encouraged” (Tomalin 225).
In a lighter sense between Mansfield Park and Sense and Sensibility, Jane Austen wrote Emma. This piece was finished on March 1815. The story revolves around Emma