Recently I finished reading Sense and Sensibility, by Jane Austen. I liked it, although I didn't quite love it. Maybe because the characters were more realistic and unlikable that those in Pride and Prejudice. While I love picking up books and analyzing them under my microscope for the themes and what each detail means I also like to read for entertainment that does not have "nutritional value." As with any other book that I have enjoyed, I got to thinking and decided that it deserved some memes.
Here you go, loves. Enjoy my low-quality, 2am caffeine-induced creations.
***SPOILERS AHEAD***
Did I feel bad for Mr. Willoughby in this scene? A little. While I understood his struggle, I couldn't forgive his ghosting of Marianne despite being in the position to openly say that they were not engaged. Better than leading the poor girl on for hundreds of pages.
I had been expecting this moment but also dreading it. It was so embarrassing when Ms. Lucy Steele was plotting to earn the good side of her potentially future mother-in-law, and finding out that she has no good side. Priceless.
Her temper was quite entertaining. I'm not mad about it.
She doesn't even go here. Where is Miss Morton and why should we care about her? Huh?
She wants crumbs. She demands crumbs. Self-respect has left the chat.
That lady was living the life. She got hate for being imprudent and nosy, but she was the ride-or-die throughout the entire novel. I'd love a friend like Mrs. Jennings.
Talk about unwanted visitors. I bet Elinor would've liked having a door camera to see who was at the door.
Holding someone like a hostage to tell her to back off your man, while claiming to be friendly and trusting her with your secret? Distasteful.
Colonel Brandon was too classy to tell him off. He respected Marianne's decision to have the trash young man inside the cottage. Honestly, I wouldn't want Mr. Willoughby in my house, either. He might try to steal my dog and gamble him away.
As long as I live, Ms. Lucy will have a hater. She wasn't simply an antagonist; her behavior was despicable.
Did I say that I hated Mr. Willoughby? Yes, of course I said that. But I didn't like Mr. Ferrars either. His behavior was not that of a respectable man. It's like being engaged and still going around picking up other women for personal entertainment. Oh wait. That's what he did.











