Brodies
Notes
for
EMMA
Jane
Austen
Brodies
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reading
Emma
Of
all
Jane
Austen's
heroines,
Emma
Woodhouse
is
the
most
flawed,
the
most
infuriating,
and,
in
the
end,
the
most
endearing.
Emma
is
lovable
precisely
because
she
is
so
imperfect.
Austen
only
completed
six
novels
in
her
lifetime,
of
which
five
feature
young
women
whose
chances
for
making
a
good
marriage
depend
greatly
on
financial
issues,
and
whose
prospects
if
they
fail
are
rather
grim.
Emma
is
the
exception:
"Emma
Woodhouse,
handsome,
clever,
and
rich,
with
a
comfortable
home
and
happy
disposition
seemed
to
unite
some
of
the
best
blessings
of
existence;
and
had
lived
nearly
twenty-one
years
in
the
world
with
very
little
to
distress
or
vex
her."
One
may
be
tempted
to
wonder
what
Austen
could
possibly
find
to
say
about
so
fortunate
a
character.
The
answer
is,
quite
a
lot.
For
Emma,
raised
to
think
well
of
herself,
has
such
a
high
opinion
of
her
own
worth
that
it
blinds
her
to
the
opinions
of
others.
The
story
revolves
around
a
comedy
of
errors:
Emma
befriends
Harriet
Smith,
a
young
woman
of
unknown
parentage,
and
attempts
to
remake
her
in
her
own
image.
Ignoring
the
gaping
difference
in
their
respective
fortunes
and
stations
in
life,
Emma
convinces
herself
and
her
friend
that
Harriet
should
look
as
high
as
Emma
herself
might
for
a
husband--and
she
zeroes
in
on
an
ambitious
vicar
as
the
perfect
match.
At
the
same
time,
she
reads
too
much
into
a
flirtation
with
Frank
Churchill,
the
newly
arrived
son
of
family
friends,
and
thoughtlessly
starts
a
rumor
about
poor
but
beautiful
Jane
Fairfax,
the
beloved
niece
of
two
genteelly
impoverished
elderly
ladies
in
the
village.
As
Emma's
fantastically
misguided
schemes
threaten
to
surge
out
of
control,
the
voice
of
reason
is
provided
by
Mr.
Knightly,
the
Woodhouse's
longtime
friend
and
neighbor.
Austen
has
endowed
her
creation
with
enough
charm
to
see
her
through
her
most
egregious
behavior,
and
the
saving
grace
of
being
able
to
learn
from
her
mistakes.
By
the
end
of
the
novel
Harriet,
Frank,
and
Jane
are
all
properly
accounted
for,
Emma
is
wiser
(though
certainly
not
sadder),
and
the
reader
has
had
the
satisfaction
of
enjoying
Jane
Austen
at
the
height
of
her
powers.
Book
is
used-
but
in
Good
Condition
-
v
minor
cover
wear,
there
are
highlighted
sections
throughout
the
whole
book-