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Welcome back to the second part of our discussion of Jane Austen and Pride and Prejudice! I have my good friend Heather Usher back with us to finish talking about the signifcance of "countenance" in Jane's famous novel, what are entails, the life of a governess, using foils, and examining Austen's prayer life.
Pride and Prejudice is a book about love, societal expectations, growth in sound judgement and in self-knowledge. It is a canvas of human failings and how they sometimes triumph over them. The book looks into deep questions like - "Can an unworthy man have a worthy friend?" "How far can a person be deceived?" "How influential are one's parents?" "Should one marry for love or for security?" "How does one's behavior affect one's family and friends?" "Can good come from evil?" "What does one do with difficult truths?" "What does Christian charity look like?" "What can you learn from retrospection?" "How can we judge what others are feeling?" "What is it to act morally?" "Is strong physical attraction the same as love?" "What is a proper sense of pride?" "What is the value of a 'marriage of true minds'?" It's a fascinating study on society and humanity. I hope you will conisder reading this masterpiece!
Favorite Resources:
COMMONPLACE QUOTES
. . . give a child a single valuable idea, and you have done more for his education than if you had laid upon his mind the burden of bushels of information . . . - Charlotte Mason, Volume 1: Home Education, p. 174
APPLICATION
By Jennifer MilliganWelcome back to the second part of our discussion of Jane Austen and Pride and Prejudice! I have my good friend Heather Usher back with us to finish talking about the signifcance of "countenance" in Jane's famous novel, what are entails, the life of a governess, using foils, and examining Austen's prayer life.
Pride and Prejudice is a book about love, societal expectations, growth in sound judgement and in self-knowledge. It is a canvas of human failings and how they sometimes triumph over them. The book looks into deep questions like - "Can an unworthy man have a worthy friend?" "How far can a person be deceived?" "How influential are one's parents?" "Should one marry for love or for security?" "How does one's behavior affect one's family and friends?" "Can good come from evil?" "What does one do with difficult truths?" "What does Christian charity look like?" "What can you learn from retrospection?" "How can we judge what others are feeling?" "What is it to act morally?" "Is strong physical attraction the same as love?" "What is a proper sense of pride?" "What is the value of a 'marriage of true minds'?" It's a fascinating study on society and humanity. I hope you will conisder reading this masterpiece!
Favorite Resources:
COMMONPLACE QUOTES
. . . give a child a single valuable idea, and you have done more for his education than if you had laid upon his mind the burden of bushels of information . . . - Charlotte Mason, Volume 1: Home Education, p. 174
APPLICATION