1. Summury
In Lambton, Elizabeth receives two letters from Jane stating that Lydia was gone off to ‘Scotland’ with Wickham. In that time, people could get married easily without their parent’s permission in there. Their escape to ‘Scotland’ can imply their hasty marriage, so Elizabeth is seriously worried about the matter. Mr. Darcy appears and hears the dreadful news. Then he offers w
2.Implications
1)Lydia’s elopement
-Jane sent a letter to Elizabeth. The letter told about Lydia’s Elopement.
• -But she had never felt so strongly as now the disadvantages which must attend the children of so unsuitable a marriage, nor ever been so fully aware of the evils arising from so ill-judged a direction of talents; talents, which, rightly used, might at least have
discussions about it. There are a couple of reasons making it possible.
Historically, South Korea has had some kind of fear to be attacked after the Korean War in 1950. The North provoked the war, at least in South Korea’s perspective. It was out of sudden when the South Korea’s military was at easy mood, and the consequence was horrible; more than 90% of Southern part was dominated by the R
discuss a certain common issue and ultimately achieve absolute gains.
On the other hands, Realists insist those kind of benefits are temporary and not absolute one even though they agree with the fact that regimes can make benefits to all participants. They think power is the central feature of regime formation and maintenance, but it is not hegemonic power. On top of that, regimes can make s
discussion on the two poets’ Romantic poetics will be confined within Locke’s theory of human identity and Rousseau’s critique of the Enlightenment self.
I call Wordsworth's poetics that of purification or washing away and Shelley's that of purgation or giving up. In this paper, purification refers to the ritualistic acts of washing polluted and impure things from the Romantic selfhood an