The Bennets have five unmarried daughters, and Mrs Bennet, is one who agrees with the opening sentence: It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife.' The statement is one of great significance to the novel, because of its masterful irony, its humorous tone, and its foreshadowing of the entire novel. To Mrs Bennet, the arrival of Mr Bingley in the neighbourhood is seen as a great opportunity for one of her daughters to obtain a wealthy spouse. The first sentence is ironic because a man with a fortune does not necessarily need a wife, as much as a woman, who has no means of outside support in the 19th century, is greatly in need of a wealthy spouse. When the reader meets Mr Darcy, a wealthy and fine, tall person', with handsome features' the ladies declared that he was much handsomer than Mr. Bingley'. The reason for this is because he has a bigger income than Bingley, and he is simply a great man due to his large fortune. Austen uses satire to ridicule the stereotype view. The universal truth' is nothing more than a social truth, which ironically is not a truth at all, but a parody of social facts. The first sentence introduces the
The Bennets have five unmarried daughters, and Mrs Bennet, is one who agrees with the opening sentence: It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife.' The statement is one of great significance to the novel, because of its masterful irony, its humorous tone, and its foreshadowing of the entire novel. To Mrs Bennet, the arrival of Mr Bingley in the neighbourhood is seen as a great opportunity for one of her daughters to obtain a wealthy spouse. The first sentence is ironic because a man with a fortune does not necessarily need a wife, as much as a woman, who has no means of outside support in the 19th century, is greatly in need of a wealthy spouse. When the reader meets Mr Darcy, a wealthy and fine, tall person', with handsome features' the ladies declared that he was much handsomer than Mr. Bingley'. The reason for this is because he has a bigger income than Bingley, and he is simply a great man due to his large fortune. Austen uses satire to ridicule the stereotype view. The universal truth' is nothing more than a social truth, which ironically is not a truth at all, but a parody of social facts. The first sentence introduces the