Sense And Sensibility
(Jane Austen)
Sense and Sensibility, by Jane Austen, is a classic manners romance that focuses on the plight of noble women when their men and therefore sources of income are taken from them. It is a sad and beautiful tale of the difference between true love and mere heightened sensibilities (feelings) towards the opposite gender. When the Dashwoods are forced from their own home after the death of their father, things look very bleak for them. Four women, one widow (their mother), two unmarried and one child, have no real way of making money in this time, so they have to learn to make do with the little that the law allowed them to have from the vast inheritance they had while their father was alive. Mrs. Dashwood's son and his wife inherit almost everything, including the huge estate that the women were used to living in, and send the Dashwood ladies off to a mere cottage in the ownership of one of their cousins. While their mother despairs of being able to marry off her daughters (because they have no dowry), both unmarried women find what they believe is love on their own -- in very different ways. The eldest tries to put her mind in front of her heart and do things in the proper way, while the younger throws caution to the wind and risks all for love. But despise the other's methods of carrying on a relationship in the midst of all their trials, and feels that their way is the better one. Eventually they must come to terms with their hearts and answer the question -- how much of your feelings is it proper to show? Austen does an incredible job of creating sympathetic characters in a time very foreign to us now, and describes the plight of the Dashwoods so that even in modern times this book is relevant and a worthy read. Love is a tricky business, especially when money is involved, and no book reflects that better than Sense and Sensibility.
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