Charlotte Lucas
Mr. Collins
Pride and Prejudice presents several different types of women. Lizzy, the main character, is a smart girl who refuses to marry for money. Pride and Prejudice presents the main character as an independent woman who makes her own decisions.
Yes, both Mary and Kitty Bennet from Pride and Prejudice eventually marry. Mary marries a clergyman named Mr. Collins after Elizabeth rejects his proposal, and Kitty marries a clergyman named Mr. Wickham's younger brother.
Mr. Darcy marries Elizabeth Bennet in the end.
He Returns To NetherField And Proposes To Jane Bennet , Soon, They Get Married
Ever watch Pride and Prejudice?
Kitty and Lydia reveal to Lizzy that Wickham is not to marry Mary King after all, and is, therefore, in their words, safe.
In "Pride and Prejudice," the exposition introduces the Bennet family and the social norms of the time, focusing on the need for the five Bennet daughters to marry well due to their lack of inheritance. It also sets up the arrival of Mr. Bingley and Mr. Darcy in the neighborhood, sparking romantic interests and conflicts.
Elizabeth Bennet's main goal in "Pride and Prejudice" is to marry for love and not simply for financial security or social status. She values independence, wit, and mutual respect in a relationship, which is why she initially rejects Mr. Darcy's proposal until she sees a change in his character.
Darcy's shows his prejudice against the lower class. He treats them with ill respect and as my mother demonstrated to me, he shows this disrespect to Lizzy. When he asks her to marry her first, he says some rather rude and degrading things. He came in without any doubt that he would refuse her because its a privedged to be loved by him- and through this, his prejudice is shown. Read the first proposal of marraige he makes her for more clarity.
After Elizabeth and Darcy marry, they move to Pemberley, and Kitty joins them there. Jane and Bingley buy an estate about thirty miles away. Lydia and Wickham stay together, but lose affection for each other. Mary stays home with her mother.
In the setting of Pride and Prejudice, society believed that most wealthy single men lacked a suitable wife. These men were seen as incomplete without finding a suitable partner to complete their social status and fulfill their duty to marry and produce heirs.